In the wake
of the Nov. 6 election, petitions seeking to secede from the union have been
filed on behalf of 23 states on the White House website, https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petitions.
Most of the petitions contain the same wording and ask to withdraw “peacefully”
from the United States in order to form independent governments.
Critics
describe the effort as a bit of an overreaction. “Anyone who wants their state
to secede from the union is someone whose brain has already seceded from their
body,” said John Andrews, director of the conservative Centennial Institute at
Colorado Christian University.
Still, the
White House may have to take the requests seriously. According to the website,
any petition receiving 25,000 online “signatures” on the “We the People” page
within 30 days of posting will receive a review by the appropriate executive
department and a response from a White House staffer.
As of
Monday, the Texas petition had already exceeded the 25,000-signature threshold,
and the Louisiana petition was fast approaching the cutoff with more than
18,000 signatures. Most of the petitions were posted online Nov. 10, which
means they have until Dec. 10 to qualify for a response.
It’s
impossible to tell from the website who is behind the drive, given that those
signing the petition only use their first names, last-name initials, and city
and state of residence. The website does show that most petitions include the John
Hancocks of signers from other states.
Steve
Eichler, CEO of TeaParty.org, said his organization isn’t involved with the
petition drive, but added that he wouldn’t be surprised if tea party advocates
were at the root of it.
“We have not
put out anything seceding from the United States, but the feedback we’re
getting shows that people believe that their elected state leaders are more in
tune with their needs than those of the federal government,” said Mr. Eichler.
He added
that support for secession has cropped up in comments on the organization’s
blogs. “People are feeling disenfranchised, they’re feeling a loss of voice,
and they just don’t know what else to do,” he said.
Many of the
petitions make their argument by quoting extensively from the Declaration of
Independence, although some also add that the federal government has grown too
large.
“The U.S.
continues to suffer economic difficulties stemming from the federal
government’s neglect to reform domestic and foreign spending,” says the Texas
petition, which had more than 34,000 signatures as of Monday evening.
The Oregon
petition argues that the federal government is guilty of an “abuse of power” by
forcing “unconstitutional laws over [its] own citizens.”
Seth Masket,
political science professor at the University of Denver, said the petitions may
be a good way to blow off steam, but that they carry no legal weight.
“It’s hard
to see this as anything other than sour grapes,” said Mr. Masket in an email.
“These petitions have no legal power and no president would ever agree to them.
It’s a way to register dissent with the way the majority of the country voted
last week, but it’s little beyond that.”
Then again,
said Mr. Eichler, the petitions could be the start of something big, such as
the first call for a constitutional convention.
Petitions have been filed on behalf of
the following states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia,
Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.
Source: The
Washington Times Monday, November 12, 2012, by Valerie Richardson, Petitions to secede are filed for 23 states since
election - Washington Times http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/nov/12/petitions-to-secede-are-filed-for-23-states-since-/?page=2#ixzz2C8bkZfNg
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