| Expressing the sense of the Congress in reaffirming the United States
of America as a republic. (Introduced in the House)
HCON 443 IH
106th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. CON. RES. 443
Expressing the sense of the Congress in reaffirming the United States
of America as a republic.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
December 4, 2000
Mr. PAUL (for himself, Mr. STUMP, Mr. METCALF, and Mr. SANFORD) submitted
the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on the Judiciary
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Congress in reaffirming the United States of
America as a republic.
Whereas the form of government secured by the Declaration of Independence,
the American Revolution, and the Constitution of the United States is a
republic--not a democracy;
Whereas the Nation's founders understood that pure `democracies have
ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found
incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have
in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their
deaths' (Federalist No. 10);
Whereas throughout the 224-year history of the United States as an independent
and sovereign nation, the people of the United States have never exercised
power as a democracy;
Whereas the people of the United States have always acted by and through
the Federal Union of the several States, electing Members of Congress from
each of the several States and the President and Vice President by electoral
votes proportioned to the number of Members of Congress representing each
State;
Whereas in the 2000 election for choosing electors for President and
Vice President, it appears that the President-elect and Vice President-elect
have won a majority of the State electoral vote, but not a plurality of
the nationwide popular vote;
Whereas the prospect of electing to office a President and Vice President
who did not win the largest number of popular votes has generated proposals
calling for a constitutional amendment to provide for the direct popular
election of the President and Vice President;
Whereas such a national popular election for President and Vice President
disregards the constitutional integrity and inviolability of the 50 States
as independent and sovereign governments;
Whereas in their foresight and wisdom, the people of the United States,
meeting by representation in State conventions, adopted a national Constitution
preserving the independence and equal standing of the 50 States;
Whereas the Federal system of equal and independent States is an essential
safeguard against shifting wills of the majority overriding the unchanging
rights of the minority;
Whereas to preserve the rights of the minority from a tyranny of the
majority, the Constitution of the United States struck a principled balance
between the people of the most populous States and the people of the least
populous States;
Whereas to that end, the Constitution of the United States provides
that the legislatures of each of the several States, without interference
from Congress or any other branch of the Federal Government or State governments,
determine the manner of election of the President and the Vice President
by State electors from each State;
Whereas the number of electors is distributed in accordance with each
State's representation in the House of Representatives and in accordance
with each State's equal standing in the Senate, not by a direct nationwide
election in accordance with population alone;
Whereas the constitutionally prescribed system in the 2000 election
for choosing electors for President and Vice President continues to function
as originally designed, protecting minority and States' rights from the
exercise of majority power; and
Whereas the electoral college system thereby preserves the diversity
of the American people and maintains the United States as a Federal republic--not
as a democracy: Now, therefore, be it Resolved
by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), That it is
the sense of the Congress that the United States is not a democracy--but
a republic--and that the present constitutionally prescribed means by which
the President and Vice President are selected State by State is essential
to preserving the diversity of the citizenry of the United States and to
maintaining the United States as a Federal republic composed of independent
and sovereign States.
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