FL Lawmakers Challenge Judicial Branch’s Power

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Both Sen. Perry and Rep. Gonzalez have been silent on the issue thus far, refusing to comment or answer questions concerning their filings. Neither of them cite any specific reasons as to why they believe the petition is warranted, but their bills broadly answer the question with radical indictments of the federal judiciary “excessively consolidat[ing] power in one branch of government, and, as George Washington observed, such encroachments eventually create ‘a real despotism.’”

They also cite Thomas Jefferson’s concerns about the fact that federal judiciary is comprised of judges who are not elected but, rather, are appointed, which Perry and Gonzalez equate with “usurpation.” The bills also claim that the Supreme Court possesses “unchecked authority on matters of the constitutionality of the United States’ laws such that its opinion on such matters has the same effect as amending the United States Constitution.”

The purpose of a jury is that, if a crime is committed, a group of objective, uninvolved peers of the defendant must reach a conclusion based on the arguments of the defense and prosecutor. The reason for this is that no one potentially involved, even remotely, in the crime can be trusted to make an objective ruling; likewise, if a bill is unconstitutional yet becomes law, the purpose of the federal judiciary’s autonomous, independent ruling according to the current structure of government is that partisan legislators cannot currently be trusted to also decide whether or not the law is constitutional since they themselves passed the law.

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