raccol wrote:Don't the requirements only address who can be a congressman and not what they are required to do?
That is correct.
Congress as a body is required to do certain things, but individual representatives are not.
If the state has the authority to appoint a Senator, it should stand to reason they have the power to recall one.
It is logical, but the Supreme Court has ruled that because the Constitution contains no mechanism for recalling or impeaching Congressmen, they cannot be recalled or impeached.
The Federalist Papers, while they are not legal documents, make clear that this was the intent of the framers. They allowed for the removal of judges, the President and other executive-branch officials, and military officers, but not Congressmen.
I also seem to recall some cases where state legislatures passed bills requiring the representatives from that state to vote a certain way, and those bills were not enforceable. I don't have time to research that point right now.
That's the problem. Senators have authority with no responsibility or accountability until the next election cycle.
That is exactly the way that our system is set up.
The framers thought that the voters would be wise enough to elect honest, qualified candidates. The occasional bad apple would be limited by the system of checks and balances, and lose his next election.
I guess they were wrong about that. Instead there are times when we get a whole barrel of bad apples.
I agree states can’t override the federal laws but why should the fed be able to override the overwhelming majority of the states?
I can only answer, because they can; and I'm not trying to be funny or sarcastic about that.
If Congress passes a bill and the President signs it, and the Supreme Court does not rule it unconstitutional, it is the law of the land.
The states have the recourse of voting out every Congressman who voted for that bill, along with the President. However, that very rarely happens. Probably the best example was the elections of 1932, when the ills of the Depression and dissatisfaction with Prohibition led to a "throw the bums out" mentality.
I still think Senators, as the state's representatives, should somehow be required to vote in a way that is not counter to the state's laws or constitution.
It is difficult to come up with a system for doing this that would not generate problems of its own.
Consider how many states have one Senator from each major party. The state legislature is usually controlled by either the Democratic or Republican party (sometimes one party controls each house). You could have a situation where a Democratic legislature was trying to give orders to a Republican Senator, or the opposite.
In any case, such a system would require a constitutional amendment, which would have to be approved by (drum roll, please) the very Congressmen who would be affected by it.
The power of the Fed gov't has gotten out of hand and somehow needs to be reigned back in. I think it's time to start the Tenth Amendment Party.
There have been states-rights parties, and perhaps there still are in some states. This was a big issue when the federal government was trying to enforce
Brown v. Board of Education, and some states did not want to go along.
The Libertarian Party favors strict construction of the Constitution, including the 10th Amendment; but you know how that has worked out.
The bottom line is that all of the people are going to get the government that the majority votes for, whether they like it or not.
- Jim