Sunday, March 2, 2014

Holder Gives States’ AG’s the Nod to Drop State Laws They Choose

Holder Gives States’ AG’s the Nod to Drop State Laws They Choose

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To Hell With State’s Rights…. To Hell with the laws enacted by the PEOPLE’s representatives of their states, for their states.
Eric Holder tells States’ AG’s they do not have to enforce laws they personally disagree with… laws that are being legally challenged.
What Holder just did was open the flood gates for a wave of legal challenges to any and every law states put on the books so AG’s have an excuse to reign over the legislators, and in essence, the wishes of the people of their respective states.
My God…… the boldness with which the Obama Administration continues to trample the Constitution and Bill of Rights is unconscionable.
A state attorney general has a solemn duty to the state and its people to defend state laws and constitutional provisions against challenge under federal law. To refuse to do so because of personal policy preferences or political pressure erodes the rule of law on which all of our freedoms are founded. A government that does not enforce the law equally will lead our society to disrespect the rule of law.,
Our AG’s swear an oath of office to enforce ALL THE LAWS, not just the ones they personally agree with.
The people of the states are entitles to vigorous defense of the laws they enact… NO EXCEPTIONS. ©2014 JAN MORGAN
Attorney General Eric Holder has given the nod to his state counterparts that they do not have to defend laws against constitutional court challenges if they consider them discriminatory
Holder addressed the issue during a gathering of state attorneys general on Tuesday, after detailing his position in a New York Times interview.
Speaking to the National Association of Attorneys General, Holder said that any decision not to defend individual laws in court must be “exceedingly rare” and reserved for “exceptional circumstances.” He indicated that legal challenges to gay marriage bans would qualify as such a circumstance.
“In general, I believe that we must be suspicious of legal classifications based solely on sexual orientation,” he said.
His remarks, while already generating backlash from conservatives, could fuel a wave of legal challenges at the state level. In the wake of the federal Defense of Marriage Act being struck down by the Supreme Court last year, several Democratic state attorneys general have taken the unusual step of abandoning their defense of state gay marriage bans.
Members of the Republican Attorneys General Association blasted Holder’s remarks in a statement Tuesday afternoon.
Holder, in the Times interview, reportedly said that attorneys general should apply a high level of scrutiny on whether to defend a state law when constitutional issues are at stake.
“Engaging in that process and making that determination is something that’s appropriate for an attorney general to do,” Holder said.
He added, in reference to the Brown v. Board of Education case challenging school segregation: “If I were attorney general in Kansas in 1953, I would not have defended a Kansas statute that put in place separate-but-equal facilities.”
A half-dozen Democratic state attorneys general have abandoned their defense of same-sex marriage bans.
But some Republican officials and gay marriage foes have sharply criticized this approach.
After Oregon’s attorney general, Ellen Rosenblum, decided not to defend such a marriage amendment, National Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown called the move shameful.
“She swore an oath of office that she would enforce all the laws, not just those she personally agrees with. The people are entitled to a vigorous defense of the laws they enact, and the marriage amendment is no exception to that solemn obligation,” he said in a statement.
As for Holder’s comments, Ed Whelan, president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, disputed Holder’s guidance and said in a statement following the speech that “state attorneys general are obligated to defend state marriage laws.”
He added: “It’s unfortunate and outrageous that Attorney General Holder doesn’t understand that, but it’s hardly surprising.”
Read more at Fox News

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