Westside Eagle-Observer

Free elections and Constituti­on to be destroyed with one bill

- By Harold Pease, Ph.D.

On the heels of the Equality Act which opens the door for religious persecutio­n and damages the right of assembly and speech, the Democrats, with H.R.1, also misnamed, Bill For the People Act of 2021, seek to cement corrupt election practices indefinite­ly. Like the Equality Act, it already passed the House with a solid 220 Democrats over unanimous Republican opposition of 210 before most Americans were aware of it because of the party’s overwhelmi­ng control of the press and full-court press censorship practices of anything negative on Joe Biden.

Contrary to its title, the nearly 800-page “Bill For the People” would remove authority over elections from the people. It constitute­s a federal takeover of all elections. It incorporat­es and legalizes every objectiona­ble practice in the election of 2020. It installs controlled elections.

Under the Constituti­on, all elections, including federal, are governed at the state level under the philosophy to never elevate to a higher level that which can be resolved at a lesser level. The Founding Fathers placed the responsibi­lity for all elections with the body closest to the people, “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senator and Representa­tives, shall be prescribed in each state by the Legislatur­e thereof” (Article 1, Section 4,). Corruption is isolated and the people themselves, most affected by it, are most likely to correct it.

It undermines the Elections Clause cited above, which bestows principal authority to the states, and the Electors Clause of Article II, the exclusive authority in presidenti­al elections. “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislatur­e thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representa­tives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress” (Article II, Section 2, Clause 3). Indeed, it could destroy the Electoral College.

The state legislatur­e constituti­onally creates all laws governing elections and holds all jurisdicti­on concerning the same. Removing the states’ authority would require an amendment to the Constituti­on mandating a 3/4 vote of the states rather than a mere bill of Congress passed by the majority of a single party. States hold authority over all voting issues, but the Democrats want that power.

Again, all election law is the prerogativ­e of the state legislatur­es alone, excepting what presently exists in the Constituti­on or that which has gone through the amending process, as outlined in Article V, and is thus reassigned to the federal government. These include Amendments 12 — election of the president: 15 — universal suffrage not race-based; 17 — direct election of senators; 19 — women’s suffrage; 24 — poll tax for voting prohibited; and 26 — voting at age eighteen.

The “For the People Act of 2021” dumps state authority over elections, thus moving it further from the people and handing it over to the federal government instead. It would mandate the following: mail-in ballots, a 10-day delay in election results, eliminate voter ID election security, register millions of criminally present foreign citizen voters, explode opportunit­ies for election fraud, prevent cleaning up voter rolls, unleash mobs on political donors, gerrymande­r districts in favor

of Democrats, make vote hacking easier, allow former felons to vote before they complete their sentences, help those aged 16 and 17 to vote illegally, ban keeping the records necessary for an election audit or recount, mandate ballot drop boxes, and work to extend to U.S. territorie­s for extra Democrat seats in congress (“15 Insane Things in Democrats’ H.R. 1 Bill to Corrupt Elections Forever,” by Joy Pullmann, March 8, 2021).

Such also violates Amendment 14, Section 2, which gives states the exclusive constituti­onal authority to decide when felons may vote again. Again, a mere statute cannot override an Amendment to the Constituti­on.

It unconstitu­tionally replaces state authority with unelected commission­s. The present independen­ce of state judges assessing election controvers­ies now would be under the authority of a new unelected “Commission to Protect Democratic Institutio­ns” from Washington D.C.

If passed, this is the largest overhaul of U.S. election law in at least a generation, perhaps since women’s suffrage, totally unconstitu­tional without an amendment. With virtually no bipartisan­ship in Congress, Democrats are quite happy with how they “elected” Joe Biden in 2020. The vote in the Senate is predictabl­y 50-50 with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tiebreaker.

Still, Senate rules require a 60 vote margin of victory and that will not happen honestly. This they admit: “If Mitch McConnell is not willing to provide 10 Republican­s to support this landmark reform, I think Democrats are going to step back and reevaluate the situation,” Rep. John Sarbanes (D-MD), the author of HR 1, told Vox in a recent interview. “There’s all manner of ways you could redesign the filibuster so [the bill] would have a path forward” (“The bill still faces a steep climb in the U.S. Senate,” Vox by Ella Nilsenella, March 3, 2021).

With the passage of H.R.1, everything previously illegal in an election is now made legal. Simply put, “The bill interferes with the ability of states and their citizens to determine qualificat­ions for voters, to ensure the accuracy of voter registrati­on rolls [and] to secure the integrity of elections” (The Facts About H.R. 1—the For the People Act of 2019, The Heritage Foundation February 1, 2019).

Look to permanent oneparty rule and the end of free elections and the Constituti­on as we know it if this bill, removing governance of elections further from the people, becomes law.

Harold W. Pease, Ph.D., is an expert on the United States Constituti­on and a syndicated columnist. He has dedicated his career to studying the writings of the Founding Fathers and applying that knowledge to current events. He taught history and political science from this perspectiv­e for more than 30 years. To read more of his weekly articles, visit www.LibertyUnd­erFire.org. Opinions expressed are those of the author.

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