84R11949 JRJ-F By: Peña H.J.R. No. 146 A JOINT RESOLUTION applying to Congress to call a convention, to propose an amendment to the United States Constitution urging the restoration of free and fair elections. WHEREAS, Our first president of the United States, George Washington, declared: "The basis of our political systems is the right of the people to make and to alter their constitutions of government" (Farewell Address, 1796); and WHEREAS, It was the clear intention of the framers of the Constitution of the United States that the Congress of the United States should be "dependent on the people alone" (James Madison, Federalist No. 52) and that dependency has evolved from a dependency on the people alone to a dependency on those who contribute lavishly and spend excessively in election campaigns or via third-party groups; and WHEREAS, The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution declares: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people," which, until 2010, had consistently been interpreted as allowing the several states to establish their own laws governing the financing of elections; and WHEREAS, Since 1905, with the passage of the Terrell Election Law and continuing for the next 105 years, the Texas Legislature has consistently exercised its legal authority to mitigate corrupting influences in its electoral process by establishing laws governing the financing of elections; and WHEREAS, The United States Supreme Court removed restrictions on independent and aggregate spending, effectively denying the several states the ability to establish their own laws governing the financing of elections and the removal of those restrictions has resulted in the undue influence of powerful economic forces, which have supplanted the will of the people by undermining their ability to choose their political leadership and determine the fate of their states and the nation as a whole; and WHEREAS, Article V of the United States Constitution included the convention method of proposing federal constitutional amendments at the urging of the delegates to the 1787 Constitutional Convention, held in Philadelphia, so that the several states could protect themselves, and their citizens, from encroachments of the federal government and preserve our Republic in the event that the federal government became unresponsive to the will of the American people; and WHEREAS, The nation's 34th president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, affirmed: "Through their state legislatures and without regard to the federal government, the people can demand a convention to propose amendments that can and will reverse any trends they see as fatal to true representative government."; and WHEREAS, Article V of the United States Constitution requires Congress to call a convention for proposing amendments to the constitution on the application of two-thirds of the legislatures of the several states, an assurance made abundantly clear by Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 85, who noted that: "The words of this article are peremptory. The Congress 'shall call a convention.' Nothing in this particular is left to the discretion of that body. And of consequence, all the declamation about the disinclination to a change vanishes in air."; and WHEREAS, The legislature perceives the need for an amendments convention in order to restore free and fair elections in America by reducing the corrupting influence of money in politics and desires that said convention be so limited; and WHEREAS, The 84th Texas Legislature intends that this joint resolution be a continuing application aggregated together with similar applications calling for a convention on this subject, such as those approved by Vermont legislators (2014 Vermont R454, Joint Resolution Senate No. 27, 160 Congressional Record S4331, POM-284), by California legislators (2014 California Resolution Chapter 77, Assembly Joint Resolution No. 1, 160 Congressional Record S5507, POM-320) and by Illinois legislators (2014 Illinois Senate Joint Resolution No. 42) and introduced by Montana legislators in 2015 (House Joint Resolution No. 3), until such time as the legislatures of two-thirds of the several states have applied for such a convention and that convention has actually been called by Congress; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the Texas delegates to said convention be composed equally of individuals currently elected to state and local office, or be selected by election, in each congressional district in Texas, for the purpose of serving as Texas delegates, though all individuals elected or appointed to federal office now, or in the past, be prohibited from serving as Texas delegates to such a convention; and, be it further RESOLVED, That the legislature intends to retain the ability to restrict or expand the authority of its Texas delegates within the limits herein expressed; and, be it further RESOLVED, That the 84th Texas Legislature apply to Congress to call a convention under Article V of the United States Constitution for the limited purpose of proposing an amendment to the constitution to urge the restoration of free and fair elections; and, be it further RESOLVED, That, unless rescinded by a succeeding legislature, this application by the 84th Texas Legislature constitutes a continuing application in accordance with Article V of the United States Constitution until at least two-thirds of the legislatures of the several states have applied to Congress to call a convention for the limited purpose of proposing an amendment to the constitution to urge the restoration of free and fair elections; and, be it further RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to the speaker of the House of Representatives and the president of the Senate of the Congress of the United States, and to all members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that this resolution be officially entered in the Congressional Record as an application to Congress for a convention under Article V of the United States Constitution for the limited purpose of proposing an amendment to the constitution to urge the restoration of free and fair elections; and, be it further RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official copies of this resolution to the secretaries of state and to the presiding officers of the legislatures of the several states with the request that they join this state in applying to Congress for a convention under Article V of the United States Constitution for the limited purpose of proposing an amendment to the constitution to urge the restoration of free and fair elections.