HON. RON PAUL OF
TEXAS
IN THE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Let’s Keep All Representatives Elected
June 4, 2003
2003 Ron Paul 60:1
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, the privately funded and privately constituted
“Continuity
of Government Commission” has recently proposed that, for the first
time in
our nations history, we should allow the appointment of members of the
U.S.
House of Representatives. Not only does this proposal fail to comport
with the
intention of the founders of this nation, but even worse, it advocates
a solution that has been repeatedly rejected by this body.
2003 Ron Paul 60:2
The report of this so-called “Commission” makes clear that while the Senate
has,
from time to time, voted to pass constitutional amendments allowing for
the
appointment of House members, this body has always jealously guarded
its status
as “the peoples House” by failing to pass such amendments. A brief
history
review may be in order at this point. First, our Nation has been under
attack
from foreign powers in the past, such as in its nascent years when the
British
were constantly “coming” In our own century, we faced an attack on
Pearl
Harbor as well as the very real threat of nuclear annihilation. Now,
because we
have learned that our Capitol was a potential target in a terror plot,
there is
an outcry from some corners regarding our vulnerability. Our government
leaders
are no more vulnerable today to mass extinction than they were 20 years
ago. Our
top-flight military makes us, in many ways, less vulnerable to attack
and the
assassination of our leaders than we were 200 years ago.
2003 Ron Paul 60:3
Even if we were to sustain such a devastating attack, the nightmare scenario
painted
in the first report of the “commission” is not only far-fetched, but
also
admits of a plethora of potential solutions already existent in our
current
constitutional structure. Though the report endeavors to cast doubt on
the
legitimacy of those structures, it is unsuccessful. Moreover, what
could be more
offensive to our republican form of government and of more questionable
legitimacy, than to have a slew of un-elected “representatives” outvote
elected people on the floor of our U.S. House?
2003 Ron Paul 60:4
Lets face it: we can scare people and doom-say anytime we wish, but it would
only be
in the case of a near-complete annihilation that our government would
fail to
function. In such an instance there is no system that will preserve
our
government. On the other hand, if we surrender the right to elect
people to the
U.S. House of Representatives under any circumstances, we will be on a
slippery
slope away from the few remaining vestiges and most precious principles
of the
government left to us by our founders.
2003 Ron Paul 60:5
In the event that this “proposal” gets more serious and is given long-term
attention, I will place in the record more detailed statements
defending the
notion of an all-elected House of Representatives, and explaining the
fallacies
and illogic found in this report. For now Mr. Speaker, I simply wish to
go on
record as among those who would fight to the last to preserve the
principle of a
House of Representatives consisting entirely of members elected by the
people.