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mick silver
1st March 2014, 02:06 PM
States frustrated by federal overreach have been taking action to nullify laws coming from Washington, D.C. — but the efforts may prove futile given long-standing court precedents dictating that states can't overturn federal law.

The federal actions under fire range from Obamacare and gun control laws to a controversial detention measure contained in a defense authorization bill.

Editor’s Note: New 'Obamacare Survival Guide' Reveals Dangers Ahead for Your Healthcare (https://w3.newsmax.com/Offers/General/NMM/Obamacare-911?promo_code=F492-1)

In one example, the South Carolina House passed the "Freedom of Health Care Protection Act" to exempt state residents from Obamacare requirements. The bill went to the state Senate in mid-February.

If approved and signed by the Republican governor, the law would prohibit state dollars from going toward implementation of the federal healthcare reform.

West Virginia in January considered a bill in its House of Delegates to void key facets of Obamacare. And in 2011, Idaho mulled legislation to declare the healthcare reform "void and of no effect" in the state. Arizona, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Georgia are among the other dozen or so states that have considered similar opt-out bills.

Obamacare is not the only perceived federal overreach. Missouri's Senate in February passed a bill to nullify federal gun control laws and imprison any federal agent who tries to enforce them in the state.

The bill, which has backing in the state House, was brought forward last year after President Barack Obama took to the national stage seeking an expanded background-checks law as well as a ban on assault weapons.

Missouri's bill likely won't pass the governor's desk — Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon has vowed to veto it — but lawmakers pressured by pro-Second Amendment constituents decided to try the nullification route anyway.

"I am proud to say that we have passed arguably one of the strongest Second Amendment protections in the country,” the bill's sponsor, state Sen. Brian Nieves, told The Associated Press.

Kansas passed its own nullification gun law a few months earlier, via its "Second Amendment Protection Act" asserting that guns that are made and owned in Kansas, including semi-automatics, are not subject to federal firearms regulations and that federal agents who try to enforce their laws can be penalized.

Dozens of other states have considered similar measures, a ProPublica investigation found.

Michigan, Virginia, California, and Alaska have enacted laws that nullify a measure contained in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that gives the federal government the power to indefinitely detain individuals without due process.

Similar bills on the detention issue have been introduced in 10 states, while in two states — South Carolina and New Hampshire — bills nullifying the federal law have been passed in at least one legislative chamber.

In New Hampshire, the state House approved a measure in February that labels the federal government's power to indefinitely detain someone under the NDAA as unconstitutional. The measure has gone to the state Senate for further action.

Some state lawmakers are fighting against Environmental Protection Agency regulations.

An Idaho lawmaker in early February introduced a bill to prevent nearly every EPA regulation from taking root in the state.

The bill sponsor, state Rep. Paul Shepherd, told the Lewiston Tribune that he introduced the proposal at the request of suction dredge miners who were sick and tired of the federal oversight trouncing on their right to work and earn a living.

"It appears the EPA bureaucracy has an agenda in its interpretation of what pollution is," Shepherd said to the paper, adding that the "bill pertains to any regulations not approved by the people."

Karen Lugo, director of the Center for Tenth Amendment Action at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, said "the Tenth Amendment, or state sovereignty, is a ghost of what our Founding Fathers intended it to be."

The 10th Amendment stipulates that powers not granted to the federal government by the Constitution nor prohibited to the states are reserved for the states and the people.

Lugo said: "Many of us are doing all in our power to breathe life back into the vital principle that is federalism. Due to Commerce Clause, Spending Clause, Necessary and Proper Clause interpretations that eclipsed state authority, there has been much whittling away of state sovereignty."

But the tide is turning as states take action, she said. "There is now a resurgence of state dynamism and autonomy. Exemplary states are running budget surpluses, reining in public pension excesses, refusing entitlement creep by declining Medicaid expansion, opting out of Obamacare state exchanges, offering school choice models, and demonstrating interest in food stamp reform."

But the chances that any of the nullification measures will withstand court scrutiny are slim.

"Nullification represents overt negation of Constitutional federal supremacy," Lugo told Newsmax.

"While it is true that some of the administrative and agency dictates coming from Washington do not comply with Constitutional separation of powers, or the proper balance of power with the states, outright defiance of federal law in an ad hoc or reactionary fashion could lead to the breakdown of the constitutional order," Lugo said.

Robert Levy, chairman of the Cato Institute, said, "States cannot prevent federal authorities from enforcing federal law. States can't nullify federal law."

That's not to say states are powerless, Levy told Newsmax.

But states have limits that have been created by the courts over what they can do to overturn or opt out of regulations they oppose, but that were nonetheless constitutionally enacted, Levy stated.

Levy said states already have at their disposal the authority to ignore federal law — as some did by passing recreational marijuana laws and opening pot shops.

Levy said that the caveat on the pot issue is that the federal government can always enforce its own laws.

And states are powerless to stop that, leading to possible situations where pot shops are legal by state standards but where buyers could be arrested and prosecuted by federal authorities, he said.

Lugo said states have another option to fight federal overreach — interstate compacts that unite smaller states into one larger legal voice.

"Interstate compacts are not the solution in all cases, but they are one way that states with similar interests — or grievances — can band together," she said.

According to Lugo, several states are currently joining forces to fight the federal government as a single united voice on "returning healthcare to state management, for restoring federal land management to states with significant acreage, and possibly for retention of highway funds while phasing down the federal gas tax."


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monty
23rd March 2018, 01:56 PM
Trump Administration Settles Suit Over Habitat Rules

The suit was filed in Federal Court in Alabama (wrong court?)


The suit (http://ag.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/agnvgov/Content/News/PR/PR_Docs/2016/2016-11-29_Complaint.1.pdf) was filed this past week in federal court in Alabama. It names as defendants the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, the National Marine Fisheries Service, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.https://4thst8.wordpress.com/2016/12/09/newspaper-column-nevada-joins-challenge-of-endangered-species-act-rule-changes/




Article III §2 Cl. 2
all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and [I]those in which a state shall be party, the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In all the other cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make.The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the state where the said crimes shall have been committed; but when not committed within any state, the trial shall be at such place or places as the Congress may by law have directed.[]




Newspaper column: Trump administration settles suit over habitat rules (https://4thst8.wordpress.com/2018/03/23/newspaper-column-trump-administration-settles-suit-over-habitat-rules/)

Mar23 (https://4thst8.wordpress.com/2018/03/23/newspaper-column-trump-administration-settles-suit-over-habitat-rules/)by Thomas Mitchell (https://4thst8.wordpress.com/author/thomasmnv/)


The Trump administration has settled a lawsuit filed by Nevada and 19 other states over Obama administration rules that sweepingly redefined what constituted critical habitat for endangered species and has agreed to rewrite those rules.


The suit (https://4thst8.wordpress.com/2016/12/09/newspaper-column-nevada-joins-challenge-of-endangered-species-act-rule-changes/), filed in November 2016 against various federal land agencies, accused the federal bureaucrats of essentially rewriting the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) to give themselves potential veto power over any use whatsoever on every square foot of rural land, public or private, in the country.


Though the ESA gives the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service authority to protect “critical habitat” occupied by endangered or threatened species, the rewritten rules redefined “critical habitat” to include land currently unoccupied by those species but just might someday, in someway, somehow — as a result of global warming or a meteor strike, perhaps — later become “critical habitat.”


Those rules gave federal agents the power to block or alter any activity — grazing, farming, buildings, mining, recreation, roads, fences, pipelines, ditches, power lines, irrigation, oil and gas exploration — that might somehow adversely affect a potential habitat for certain protected rodents, minnows, bugs, birds, reptiles, beasts and weeds.
The settlement, reached this past week, requires the federal land agencies to submit revised rules for public review within 60 days. The states reserve the right to file another lawsuit if the new rules are unsatisfactory.


“I commend the federal government for agreeing to reconsider rules created in the previous administration that could have severely restricted property owners’ use of their own land,” said Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt, who joined the suit, which was filed in Alabama. “If this federal land grab had been implemented, the federal government could have expanded critical habitat designations to include entire states. I am proud of the result of our joint efforts to protect Nevada land from burdensome and unconstitutional federal overreach.” (Critical habitat (https://4thst8.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/critical-habitat.pdf))


That overreach flew in the face of the ESA’s requirement that “critical habitat shall not include the entire geographical area which can be occupied by the threatened or endangered species,” except in a circumstance determined by the secretary of the Interior.


Opponents of the rules said they impermissibly relied on hope and base speculation.


The lawsuit also said the rules create huge costs for private landowners and small businesses who must go to the expense of obtaining federal permits in order to make even minor modifications to their own property. Permits could be denied under rules that were obviously arbitrary, capricious and onerous.


Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge commented (https://arkansasag.gov/media-center/news-releases/federal-government-will-reconsider-overreaching-critical-habitat-rules-in-light-of-arkansas-led-lawsuit/) on the settlement and said, “Our wildlife must be protected for future generations, but it is completely unreasonable to give the federal government broad authority to restrict land usage just because bureaucrats in D.C. think an animal might, possibly, one day inhabit that land — even if that land does not have features necessary for its survival. These rules are a clear example of an Obama-era overreach that must be changed to protect the rights of land owners and the States.”


Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall noted (http://altoday.com/archives/22053-us-government-rewrite-2-endangered-species-rules-ag-steve-marshall-applauds) Congress had purposefully set a stricter standard for land not occupied by endangered species, saying the Obama administration rules violated the intent of Congress and defied common sense.


“These rules even allowed the federal government to prevent activities it decided could adversely affect habitat features that do not actually exist,” Marshall said. “For example, as the States noted in their complaint, the federal government ‘could declare desert as critical habitat for fish and then prevent the construction of a highway through desert lands, under the theory that it would prevent the future formation of a stream that might one day support the species.’”


Of course, the self-styled environmentalists don’t want any changes. An attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity told E&E News in an email, “We’ll be taking a close look at the revised rules and are likely to challenge them if we identify any departure from the Endangered Species Act’s requirement that the agencies protect habitats essential for species recovery.”


In addition to Nevada, other states participating in this settlement include: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.


Over the 45 years since the passage of the Endangered Species Act the return on investment has been practically nil. Only 1 percent of listed species have ever recovered sufficiently to be delisted, despite the law’s huge impact on economic endeavors. Hopefully, the rewritten rules will lessen the impact.


A version of this column appeared this week in many of the Battle Born Media newspapers — The Ely Times (http://www.elynews.com/), the Mesquite Local News (http://mesquitelocalnews.com/), the Mineral County Independent-News (http://mcindependentnews.com/), the Eureka Sentinel (http://eurekasentinel.com/) and the Lincoln County Record (http://www.lccentral.com/) — and the Elko Daily Free Press (http://elkodaily.com/).


https://assets.change.org/photos/3/rf/ln/dIRFLNAUbbSAFHQ-800x450-noPad.jpg?1484979056 (https://www.change.org/p/protect-the-endangered-species-act)

Cebu_4_2
23rd March 2018, 05:03 PM
Sounds like a move in the right direction however I did not read or research the ESA ruling.

Joshua01
23rd March 2018, 06:49 PM
I still want Kommiefornia to sink beneath the Pacific!