Written by Joe Wolverton,
II, J.D.
"Your
papers, please."
This
is a phrase that Americans should get used to hearing.
In
April, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reportedly will begin enforcing the REAL ID Act, a measure
requiring Americans to produce federal government-approved identification upon
demand.
In
order to ensure that all Americans carry the national ID card, the REAL ID Act
establishes standards for driver’s licenses that must be met by states. DHS
reports that to date 21 state governments have complied with the federal
mandates.
One
of those states, however, has now backed out of the REAL ID program.
Ohio's
Columbus Dispatch reports:
Privacy
concerns have scuttled state plans to meet all federal “Real ID” standards,
which could result in Ohio driver’s licenses not being accepted as sufficient
identification to board airplanes and enter federal buildings.
The
Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles decided about five months ago to back off the
Real ID compliance plan approved by the federal Department of Homeland
Security, but it never made a public announcement about the change.
Ohio
state officials take issue with Homeland Security’s demand that all relevant
personal data, including birth certificates and medical records, be stored and
shared with the federal agency.
The
Buckeye State also rejected the federal government’s offer of facial
recognition software that will scan license photos making it possible to track
people forever, even if they change names or addresses. Of course, as this
“one-person one license” standard is a federal program, every individual who
carries a state-issued ID will be able to be tracked no matter where they go in
the United States.
“The
objection is that it’s not acceptable in many circles in Ohio to do facial
recognition on everyone who comes in to get a license,” said Joe Andrews,
spokesman for the Ohio Department of Public Safety, as reported by the
Dispatch. “People have concerns we are trampling their rights if we do
this,” Andrews added.
Remarkably,
similar concerns have been expressed by lawmakers on Capitol Hill, as well.
In
an op-ed published in the Washington Times last May,
Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) evoked the images of dictatorships of the past and
their citizen registration policies:
Forcing
Americans to carry around an identification card to affirmatively prove
citizenship offends our basic concept of freedom. Wanting to avoid a “papers
please” culture in our country is also why conservatives oppose federal
universal gun background checks. We oppose such measures not because we don’t
believe in common-sense rules or regulation — but because we are wary of giving
the federal government this kind of centralized power over our daily lives.
These
draconian ideas would simply give government too much power.
Consolidating
immense power is the true purpose of the REAL ID Act, and Ohio is right to
refuse to cooperate in the scheme. In fact, other states should follow suit and
force the federal beast to stay inside its constitutional cage.
It
is this refusal to go along with unconstitutional federal programs that James
Madison recommended as a way to maintain state sovereignty.
States,
Madison said in The Federalist, No. 46, possess a “means of
opposition” to federal overreach: “refusal to cooperate with the officers of
the Union.”
About
10 years later, Madison said that states have not only the right to resist
encroachments of the federal government, but also an obligation to do so. “In
case of a deliberate, palpable, and dangerous exercise of other powers, not
granted by the said compact, the states who are parties thereto, have the
right, and are in duty bound, to interpose for arresting the progress of the
evil, and for maintaining within their respective limits, the authorities,
rights and liberties appertaining to them,” Madison wrote in the Virginia
Resolution of 1798.
Article
VI of the Constitution places state legislators under an oath “to support this
Constitution.”
We,
the people, must demand that our representatives in the state assemblies abide
by their oath of office by refusing to enforce all unconstitutional acts of the
federal government within the borders of the several states. This is the
foolproof, fail-safe means of resistance known as nullification.
The
first step in keeping the federal government from consolidating all power in
Washington is to remember that any act of Congress, bureaucratic regulation, or
executive order that exceeds the constitutional limits on federal power has no
legal effect. States can — must — courageously refuse to enforce
those acts using the historically, legally, and constitutionally sound
principle of nullification.
Simply
stated, nullification recognizes the right of states to invalidate any federal
measure that a state deems unconstitutional. The right to nullify federal
usurpations comes from the fact that the sovereign states formed the union, and
as creators of the compact, they hold ultimate authority as to the limits of
the power of the federal government to enact laws that are applicable to states
and their citizens.
Although
DHS refused to comment directly on Ohio’s decision (or that of the two dozen
additional states that have enacted some degree of REAL ID-nullifying bill), a
spokeswoman told the Dispatch that the Obama administration is
“committed to working with each jurisdiction to support their efforts to meet
its secure driver’s license requirements.”
Undoubtedly,
there will be a rude awakening for citizens of states that fail to comply with
the REAL ID standards. DHS will surely order its
minions patrolling the country's airports to forbid anyone without
federally approved identification to board planes. This, in turn, will put
additional pressure on state governments to give in to federal pressure to
participate with the national ID program. This acquiescence will then lead to
the mass uploading of personal information to federal databases.
The
idea that somehow federal law trumps state law is very popular, even among
self-described “conservatives.” The media and public schools have been very
successful in perpetrating this incorrect interpretation of one clause of
Article VI.
The
“Supremacy Clause” (as some wrongly call it) of Article VI does not declare
that federal laws are the supreme law of the land without qualification. What
it says is that the Constitution "and laws of the United States made in
pursuance thereof" are the supreme law of the land.
Read
that again: “in pursuance thereof,” not in violation thereof. If an act of
Congress is not permissible under any enumerated power given to it in the
Constitution, it was not made in pursuance of the Constitution and therefore
not only is not the supreme law of the land, it is not the law at all.
Constitutionally
speaking, then, whenever the federal government passes any measure not provided
for in the limited roster of its enumerated powers, those acts are not the
final word. Instead, they are “merely acts of usurpation” and do not qualify as
the supreme law of the land. In fact, acts of Congress are the supreme law of
the land only if they are made in pursuance of its constitutional powers, not
in defiance thereof.
Alexander
Hamilton put an even finer point on the issue when he wrote in The Federalist,
No. 78, “There is no position which depends on clearer principles, than that
every act of a delegated authority contrary to the tenor of the commission
under which it is exercised, is void. No legislative act, therefore, contrary
to the constitution, can be valid.”
State
efforts to fight the federal “your papers please” agenda are praiseworthy, but
more needs to be done. Americans should wage this battle on many fronts,
including demanding that their representatives in Washington, D.C. repeal the
REAL ID Act in advance of its full implementation (scheduled for sometime in
2015).
There
isn’t a single syllable in the Constitution giving Congress (or any executive
branch department) the authority to create a national ID card or develop facial
recognition software that will make it possible to follow people from state to
state, and so the REAL ID Act is ripe for repeal.
Joe
A. Wolverton, II, J.D. is a correspondent for The
New American and travels frequently nationwide speaking on topics of
nullification, the NDAA, the Second Amendment, and the surveillance
state. He is the co-founder of Liberty Rising, an educational endeavor
aimed at promoting and preserving the Constitution. Follow him on Twitter
@TNAJoeWolverton and he can be reached at jwolverton@thenewamerican.com
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