man on a boat wrote:
The following article was originally published on The Washington Times.
Alabama has become the fourth state to pass legislation calling for a constitutional convention of states to limit the power and jurisdiction of the federal government.
Last weeks move made Alabama the first state to pass such legislation this year after Georgia, Florida, and Alaska which passed the Convention of States resolution in 2014.
The Convention of States efforts hinges on Article V of the U.S. Constitution, which allows Congress to propose amendments and on the application of the legislatures of two thirds of the several states, Congress shall call a convention for proposing amendments.
Alabamas resolution would impose fiscal restraints on the federal government and limit the terms of office for its officials and for members of Congress.
In a statement Thursday, Terry Richmond, Alabama legislative liaison said he was overwhelmed by the support we received from both volunteers and legislators over the past few months. The dedication, vision, and prayers of every volunteer in the state, along with the hard work and commitment of our sponsors and their staff, is what made this victory possible. The people of Alabama should hold their heads high theyve implemented the Founders tool to fight federal overreach, and were one step closer to turning a Convention of States into a reality.
Convention of States co-founder Mark Meckler said The citizens of the great state of Alabama have stepped up and joined the movement to tell the federal government to back off by passing the Convention of States resolution by overwhelming majorities. Legislation is pending in many other states, with Texas and Kansas next in line. The citizens are speaking; its time for the states to put the federal government back in the box.
Legislatures in 36 states have constitutional convention resolutions now making their way through committees and other parts of the legislative process.
At least 34 states, or two-thirds, must pass applications for a convention and ultimately would need a sign-off from Congress to hold a convention. Thirty-eight states must then ratify any amendment proposals coming out of such a convention.
The following article was originally published on ... (
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Term limits should apply to all three branches of government. The Federal Judiciary is a joke. Federal Judges are nominated by the president, and confirmed by the party currently in power in the Oligarchy that used to be the US Senate. I include the Supreme Court in this also. Since the passage of the 17th Amendment, we have an Imperial Senate, with Senators in office for 30 and 40 years. Before the ratification of the 17th, this never would have happened, because the State Legislatures who elected the Senators up until that point would never have stood for it.
I digress. To think that anyone who is appointed to a powerful, well-compensated position that is effectively a lifetime sinecure will be neutral, rather than beholden to the party that confirmed them in the job is naive on steroids. They would not have even been nominated were their political views not in line with the majority party.
Federal Judges should have term limits of no more than ten years, maybe less.