
RESOLUTION FOR CONGRESS TO CONVENE
A CONVENTION TO PROPOSE
AMENDMENTS CONSTITUTING A BILL
OF FEDERALISM
Whereas Article I of the Constitution of the United States
begins “All legislative powers herein
granted shall be vested in a Congress of the
United States”; and Whereas the congress of the United States has exceeded the
legislative powers granted in the Constitution thereby usurping the powers that
are “reserved to the states respectively, or to the people” as the Tenth
Amendment affirms and the rights “retained by the people” to which the Ninth
Amendment refers; and Whereas the Supreme Court of the United States has
ignored or misinterpreted the meaning of the Constitution by upholding this
usurpation; To restore a proper balance between the powers of Congress and
those of the several States, and to prevent the denial or disparagement of the
rights retained by the people, the legislature of the State of ________ hereby
resolves;
First,
that Congress shall call a convention, consisting of delegates from the several
States selected by procedures established by their respective legislatures, for
the purpose of proposing the following articles be added as separate amendments
to the Constitution of the United States, each of which shall be valid to all
intents and purposes as part of the Constitution when separately ratified by
the legislatures of three-fourths of the several States; and
Second,
that any previous memorial for a convention under Article V of the Constitution
of the United States by this legislature is hereby repealed and without effect;
and
Third,
that copies of this memorial shall be sent to the secretary of state and presiding
officers of both houses of the legislatures of each of the several states in
the union, the clerk of the United States house of representatives, the
secretary of the United States senate, and to each member of the ________
congressional delegation; and
Fourth,
that this memorial for a convention is conditioned on the memorials of
two-thirds of the legislatures of the several states proposing the exact same language
contained in some or all of the following articles, and is to remain in effect unless
repealed by resolution of this legislature prior to the memorials of two-thirds
of the states being reported to Congress:
[The Bill of Federalism]
Article [of Amendment 1] — [Restrictions on Tax Powers of
Congress]1
Section 1.
Congress shall make no law laying or collecting taxes upon incomes, gifts, or
estates, or upon aggregate consumption or expenditures; but Congress shall have
power to levy a uniform tax on the sale of goods or services.
Section 2. Any
imposition of or increase in a tax, duty, impost or excise shall require the
approval of three-fifths of the House of Representatives and three-fifths of
the Senate, and shall separately be presented to the President of the United
States.
Section 3. This
article shall be effective five years from the date of its ratification, at
which time the sixteenth Article of amendment is repealed.
Article [of Amendment 2] — [Limits of Commerce Power]2
The power of Congress to make all laws which are necessary
and proper to regulate commerce among the several states, or with foreign
nations, shall not be construed to include the power to regulate or prohibit
any activity that is confined within a single state regardless of its effects
outside the state, whether it employs instrumentalities there from, or whether
its regulation or prohibition is part of a comprehensive regulatory scheme; but
Congress shall have power to regulate harmful emissions between one state and
another, and to define and provide for punishment of offenses constituting acts
of war or violent insurrection against the United States.
Article [of Amendment 3] — [Unfunded Mandates and Conditions
on Spending]3
Congress shall not impose upon a State, or political
subdivision thereof, any obligation or duty to make expenditures unless such
expenditures shall be fully reimbursed by the United States; nor shall Congress
place any condition on the expenditure or receipt of appropriated funds
requiring a State, or political subdivision thereof, to enact a law or
regulation restricting the liberties of its citizens.
Article [of Amendment 4] — [No Abuse of the Treaty Power]4
No treaty or other international agreement may enlarge the
legislative power of Congress granted by this Constitution, nor govern except
by legislation any activity that is confined within the United States.
Article [of Amendment 5] — [Freedom of Political Speech and
Press]5
The freedom of speech and press includes any contribution to
political campaigns or to candidates for public office; and shall be construed
to extend equally to any medium of communication however scarce.
Article [of Amendment 6] — [Power of States to Check Federal
Power]6
Upon the identically worded resolutions of the legislatures
of three quarters of the states, any law or regulation of the United States,
identified with specificity, is thereby rescinded.
Article [of Amendment 7] — [Term Limits for Congress]7
No person who has served as a Senator for more than nine
years, or as a Representative for more than eleven years, shall be eligible for
election or appointment to the Senate or the House of Representatives
respectively, excluding any time served prior to the enactment of this Article.
Article [of Amendment 8] — [Balanced Budget Line Item Veto]8
Section 1.
The budget of the United States shall be deemed unbalanced whenever the total
amount of the public debt of the United States at the close of any fiscal year
is greater than the total amount of such debt at the close of the preceding
fiscal year.
Section 2.
Whenever the budget of the United States is unbalanced, the President may,
during the next annual session of Congress, separately approve, reduce or disapprove
any monetary amounts in any legislation that appropriates or authorizes the
appropriation of any money drawn from the Treasury, other than money for the operation
of the Congress and judiciary of the United States.
Section 3.
Any legislation that the President approves with changes pursuant to the second
section of this Article shall become law as modified. The President shall return
with objections those portions of the legislation containing reduced or disapproved
monetary amounts to the House where such legislation originated, which may
then, in the manner prescribed in the seventh section of the first Article of
this Constitution, separately reconsider each reduced or disapproved monetary
amount.
Section 4.
The Congress shall have power to implement this Article by appropriate legislation;
and this Article shall take effect on the first day of the next annual session of
Congress following its ratification.
Article [of Amendment 9] — [The Rights Retained by the
People]9
Section 1. All
persons are equally free and independent, and have certain natural, inherent
and unalienable rights which they retain when forming any government, amongst
which are the enjoying, defending and preserving of their life and liberty, acquiring,
possessing and protecting real and personal property, making binding contracts
of their choosing, and pursuing their happiness and safety.
Section 2. The
due process of law shall be construed to provide the opportunity to introduce
evidence or otherwise show that a law, regulation or order is an infringement
of such rights of any citizen or legal resident of the United States, and the
party defending the challenged law, regulation, or order shall have the burden
of establishing the basis in law and fact of its conformity with this
Constitution.
Article [of Amendment 10] — [Neither Foreign Law nor
American Judges May Alter the Meaning of Constitution]10
The words and phrases of this Constitution shall be
interpreted according to their meaning at the time of their enactment, which
meaning shall remain the same until changed pursuant to Article V; nor shall
such meaning be altered by reference to the law of nations or the laws of other
nations.
RATIONALE FOR THE AMENDMENTS
1. The income tax has vastly increased
the power and the intrusiveness of the federal government, far beyond what the
framers of the Sixteenth Amendment ever imagined. The first proposed amendment
restores the original taxing power of Congress by denying it the power to enact
income estate or gift taxes, or to circumvent this restriction by levying an
annual tax on net consumption or expenditures. Lest the prohibition on an
aggregate consumption tax raises any doubt, the provision makes clear that
Congress retains the power to impose a sales tax that is uniform. Sometimes
called a “fair tax,” a national sales tax would be paid by all persons residing
in the United States, whether legally or illegally, without the need for
intrusive reporting of their activities. As people buy and consume more, they
would pay more in taxes, but all their savings and investments would appreciate
free of tax. To give Congress ample time to fashion an alternative revenue
system — and do away with the IRS — the implementation of this amendment is
delayed for five years. Of course, Congress may end the income or estate tax
sooner if it so chooses.
2. As Congress has exercised powers
beyond those delegated to it by the Constitution, the powers of states that
were reserved by the enumeration of delegated powers have been usurped. The
second proposed amendment restores the Commerce Clause to its original meaning,
thereby leaving wholly intrastate activities to be prohibited or regulated by
the several states, or be left completely free of any regulations as states may
choose. And it negates three constructions adopted by the Supreme Court to
expand the reach of Congress under the Necessary and Proper Clause—sometimes
called the “Sweeping Clause”—of Article I: that Congress has power to regulate
wholly interstate activity that either (a) “affects” interstate activity, (b)
uses instrumentalities obtained from outside the state, or (c) is part of a
comprehensive national regulatory scheme. This amendment makes clear that Congress
retains the power to regulate interstate pollution and the power to define and
punish acts of war and insurrection against the United States, for example, the
possession of weapons of mass destruction. This provision leaves untouched the
delegated powers of Congress to regulate wholly intrastate activities to
enforce civil rights as expressly authorized by, for example, the Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
Fifteenth and Nineteenth Amendments; it only restricts the improper
construction of the Commerce and Necessary and Proper Clauses to reach wholly intrastate
activity.
3. The third proposed amendment
addresses two sources of persistent federal intrusion into the powers of
states. The first is federal laws mandating state action necessitating the
expenditure of state funds without reimbursing the states for their
expenditures. In this manner, the federal government can take credit for
adopting measures without incurring the political cost of increasing taxes or
borrowing. The second problem is the use of federal spending to restrict
liberty for purposes not delegated to the United States. For example, the 55
mph speed limit was imposed by the states by conditioning the receipt of
federal highway funds upon compliance with this mandate. This amendment makes
this type of condition on funding unconstitutional.
4. The framers of the Constitution were
profoundly wary of entangling the United States in international legal
commitments, so they required two-thirds of the Senate to ratify all treaties,
and they assumed that treaties would only reach matters of truly international
concern. These principles have been subverted by several misinterpretations of
the Constitution. First, the treaty power has been interpreted to reach every
imaginable subject, including many subjects of purely local concern. Second,
the treaty power has been interpreted as a mechanism to increase the
legislative power of Congress, thus creating a doubly perverse incentive: an
incentive to enter into new international legal obligations simply to attain
increased domestic legislative power. This amendment would correct these errors
and restore the original meaning of the Treaty Clause and the Supremacy Clause.
5. The fifth proposed amendment makes
it clear that the freedom of speech and press now protected by the First
Amendment extends equally to all media, including for example radio and
television, as well as to financial contributions to political candidates and
campaigns.
6. At present, the only way for states
to contest a federal law or regulation is to seek an amendment to the
Constitution by applying for a constitutional convention to propose amendments
that must then be ratified by three-quarters of the states. This proposed
amendment provides an additional check on federal power by empowering the same
number of states to rescind any law or regulation when they concur it is
necessary. Such a power provides a targeted method to reverse particular Congressional
acts and administrative regulations without the risk of permanently amending
the text of the Constitution.
7. The seventh proposed amendment
establishes congressional term limits by allowing two full terms for Senators
and six full terms for Representatives. It phases in these limits by exempting
the time already served by incumbents from the calculation of the limits on
their terms.
8. The practice by Congress of
aggregating thousands of lines of expenditures into “omnibus” appropriation
bills has greatly diminished the veto power that the Constitution reposes in
the President. Because of their reluctance to threaten a government shutdown,
Presidents are loath to veto such bills. Knowing this, Senators and
Representatives can load spending bills with pork, knowing that Congress will
never have to give an up or down floor vote to a particular line item and that
the threat of a presidential veto is empty. While there is great demand for
constitutional requirement of a balanced budget, mechanisms for this that have
been devised to date are highly complex, typically contain numerous exceptions
and loop-holes, and lack effective means of enforcement. By linking the goal of
a balanced budget with a temporary presidential line-item veto, the eighth
proposed amendment provides a real incentive for Congress to devise a balance
budget; if Congress fails to do so, the President would then have a temporary
line item veto power over any appropriation in the budget. For example, should
Congress enact a budget with a deficit, the President could veto Congressional
earmarks and be held accountable for failing to do so. The amendment also
ensures that Congress will retain the same power to override any presidential
line item veto as it currently has for a traditional veto. The operation and
advantages of this measure over other balance budget amendments is explained in
detail here:
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-487es.html
9. The existing Ninth Amendment says
that “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be
construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” Section 1 of
this proposal elaborates on the original meaning of “rights . . . retained by
the people” with language that is adopted from the wording of amendments
proposal to the first Congress by state ratification conventions and by James
Madison, and from the very similar wording found in several state Constitutions
at the time of the Founding. For example, the constitution of Pennsylvania
read: “That all men are born equally free and independent, and have certain
natural, inherent and unalienable rights, amongst which are, the enjoying and
defending of life and liberty, acquiring, possessing and protecting property,
and pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety.” Likewise, the Civil Rights Act
of 1866 protected the right of any citizen “to make and enforce contracts, to
sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold,
and convey real and personal property, and to full and equal benefit of all
laws and proceedings for the security of person and property. . . .” Section 2
corrects the current approach of the Supreme Court that precludes citizens and
legal residents from contesting the necessity and propriety of restrictions on
their retained rights unless the Court deems the right in question to be “fundamental”
and provides all liberties with the same type of protection now accorded the
rights of freedom of speech, press, and assembly, and the right to keep and
bear arms.
10. The tenth proposed amendment
ensures that the text of the Constitution remains the supreme law of the land
by preventing judges from ignoring or changing the linguistic meaning of the
text of the Constitution by “interpretation.” It requires that judges obey the
text of the Constitution until it is properly changed by a constitutional
amendment. And it confirms that foreign law is relevant to constitutional
interpretation only to the extent that it casts light on the original public
meaning of the constitutional text. A constitution that is ignored or
systematically misinterpreted is a dead constitution. Only if the Constitution
is actually followed can it accurately be considered as a “living constitution.”