Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Nullification: It’s Official

by Derek Sheriff

While speaking to a large crowd of over a thousand people on the campus of Arizona State University last December, Congressman Ron Paul mentioned one thing that might come about as the result of the federal government habitually ignoring the Constitution: Nullification.

About five minutes into the video segment which you'll find below, he said, "There's not much attention paid to the Constitution in Washington. There's not much attention paid to it by our executive branch of government. And we don't get much protection from our courts. So one thing that might finally happen from this if the people finally feel so frustrated that they can't get the results out of Washington – they're going to start thinking about options. They might start thinking about nullification and a few things like that."

As someone who attended that rally and was doing my best to represent my state's chapter of The Tenth Amendment Center, I know I cheered very loudly and was very pleased when the rest of the crowd applauded enthusiastically.

For anyone who is unfamiliar with the concept of state nullification, it was the idea expressed by then sitting vice president, Thomas Jefferson, when he authored what came to be called the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798. The resolutions made the case that the federal government is a creature of the states and that states have the authority to judge the constitutionality of the federal government's laws and decrees. He also argued that states should refuse to enforce laws which they deemed unconstitutional.

James Madison wrote a similar resolution for Virginia that same year, in which he asserted that whenever the federal government exceeds its constitutional limits and begins to oppress the citizens of a state, that state's legislature is duty bound to interpose its power to prevent the federal government from victimizing its people. Very similar to Jefferson's concept of nullification, Madison's doctrine of interposition differed in some small but important ways. READ MORE

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