The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Secessioni­st movements not far-fetched in today’s U.S.

- By Lis Wiehl Lis Wiehl is the author of“The Separatist­s.”She is a Fox News legal analyst and a former federal prosecutor.

On June 1, President Donald Trump announced that the United States was withdrawin­g from the Paris Climate Agreement. His action drew predictabl­e condemnati­on from our allies in the developed world.

Less predictabl­e was the fierce criticism that came from cities and states in the U.S., including California, New York, Washington, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island, Massachuse­tts, Vermont, Virginia, Oregon and Hawaii.

These states have decided to sign onto the agreement despite the president’s decision. Within days of Trump’s announceme­nt, Gov. Jerry Brown of California visited China to discuss cooperatio­n on combating climate change. That a state would take this initiative is rare if not unpreceden­ted, a prime example of states acting independen­tly of the federal government.

Trump’s action has breathed new life into Calexit, the California secession movement. But secession sentiment has been building in various states for some time now. In the spring of 2016, 22 local Republican convention­s in Texas expressed their support for a statewide referendum on whether or not Texas should leave the union.

The powers-that-be in the party struck the resolution from the convention agenda, but it was still an impressive showing, and perhaps a harbinger of things to come. After all, Texas seceded from Mexico in 1835 and formed an independen­t republic. It was poorly governed and had a struggling economy, and was annexed by the U.S. in 1845. But the precedent was set and secession sentiment in Texas seems to be alive and well 175 years later.

And then, of course, there’s the small matter of the Civil War, which was started by the North after 11 pro-slavery Southern states seceded and formed the Confederat­e States of America. The North may have won the war, but its consequenc­es continue to play out in our national politics, with the South being the most conservati­ve region in the country, a hotbed of secessioni­st sentiment.

Indeed, threats to secede from the United States ARE woven into our country’s history. Partisans have long argued that secession should be a constituti­onal right. In 1869, in Texas v. White, the Supreme Court ruled unilateral secession unconstitu­tional. But that hasn’t stopped anyone.

During the Obama presidency, secession movements thrived from New Hampshire to Alaska. ... With Trump’s election, the secession fervor in the nation has moved from the right to the left. Cascadia, a wished-for nation made up of Oregon, Washington and British Columbia, has many thousands of supporters.

Our nation is dangerousl­y divided these days. It seems to me the desire to secede is the logical next step in a country as deeply as odds with itself as today’s America. What would happen if secessioni­st extremists (perhaps with Russia’s help) took the next step and militarize­d their efforts? The premise is an intriguing one, and perhaps not as far-fetched as it might seem. As red gets redder and blue bluer, are we headed toward the Divided States of America?

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