Bill Text: TX HB2930 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating to the Texas Sovereignty Act.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-03-18 - Referred to State Affairs [HB2930 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HB2930-Introduced.html
87R5810 TJB-F | ||
By: Schofield | H.B. No. 2930 |
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relating to the Texas Sovereignty Act. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. (a) This Act may be cited as the Texas | ||
Sovereignty Act. | ||
(b) The legislature finds that: | ||
(1) The people of the several states forming the | ||
United States of America created the federal government to be their | ||
agent for certain enumerated powers delegated by the states and the | ||
people to the federal government through the United States | ||
Constitution. | ||
(2) The Tenth Amendment to the United States | ||
Constitution confirms the intent and understanding of the people of | ||
the United States that all powers not delegated to the United States | ||
by the Constitution, or prohibited by it to the states, are reserved | ||
to the states respectively, or to the people. | ||
(3) Each power delegated to the federal government by | ||
the United States Constitution is constitutionally limited to that | ||
power as it was understood and exercised at the time it was | ||
delegated. An amendment to the Constitution as ratified by the | ||
states is required to expand or limit a constitutionally delegated | ||
power. | ||
(4) The United States Constitution authorizes the | ||
United States Congress to exercise only those specific powers | ||
enumerated in Section 8, Article I, United States Constitution, and | ||
those other powers as may be delegated to Congress through | ||
amendments to the Constitution as ratified by the states. | ||
(5) Article VI, United States Constitution, makes | ||
supreme the Constitution and federal laws enacted pursuant to the | ||
Constitution, further requiring that public officials at all levels | ||
and in all branches of government support the Constitution. | ||
(6) The power delegated to the United States Congress | ||
to regulate commerce among the several states under Section 8, | ||
Article I, United States Constitution, is limited to federal | ||
regulation of actual commerce between the states and among foreign | ||
nations. Regulation of intrastate commerce is reserved to the | ||
states and to the people of the states. The Commerce Clause of the | ||
Constitution constrains the legislative, executive, and judicial | ||
branches of the federal government. | ||
(7) The power delegated to the United States Congress | ||
to make all necessary and proper federal laws under Section 8, | ||
Article I, United States Constitution, allows Congress to enact | ||
only those laws necessary and proper to execute the | ||
constitutionally delegated powers vested in the federal | ||
government, all other powers being reserved to the states and to the | ||
people of the states. | ||
(8) The power delegated to the United States Congress | ||
to provide for the general welfare of the United States under | ||
Section 8, Article I, United States Constitution, in the General | ||
Welfare Clause constitutionally constrains Congress when | ||
exercising a delegated power to act in a manner that serves the | ||
states and the people of the states well and uniformly. | ||
(9) Sections 1 and 2, Article I, Texas Constitution, | ||
provide that this state and the people of this state retain the | ||
sovereign power to regulate the affairs of Texas, subject only to | ||
the United States Constitution. | ||
(c) The federal government does not have the power to take | ||
any legislative, executive, or judicial action that violates the | ||
United States Constitution. | ||
(d) The contract with the State of Texas has been willfully | ||
violated by the federal government and must be constitutionally | ||
restored. | ||
(e) This Act calls on all officials in federal, state, and | ||
local government, in all branches and at all levels, to honor their | ||
oaths to preserve, protect, and defend the United States | ||
Constitution and its ratified amendments against any federal action | ||
that: | ||
(1) would unconstitutionally undermine, diminish, or | ||
disregard the balance of powers between the sovereign states and | ||
the federal government established by the United States | ||
Constitution and its ratified amendments; or | ||
(2) is outside the scope of the power delegated to the | ||
federal government by the United States Constitution. | ||
SECTION 2. Subtitle Z, Title 3, Government Code, is amended | ||
by adding Chapter 394 to read as follows: | ||
CHAPTER 394. ENFORCEMENT OF UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION | ||
Sec. 394.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: | ||
(1) "Committee" means the Joint Legislative Committee | ||
on Constitutional Enforcement. | ||
(2) "Federal action" includes: | ||
(A) a federal law; | ||
(B) a federal agency rule, policy, or standard; | ||
(C) an executive order of the president of the | ||
United States; | ||
(D) an order or decision of a federal court; and | ||
(E) the making or enforcing of a treaty. | ||
(3) "Unconstitutional federal action" means a federal | ||
action enacted, adopted, or implemented without authority | ||
specifically delegated to the federal government by the people and | ||
the states through the United States Constitution. | ||
Sec. 394.002. JOINT LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE ON | ||
CONSTITUTIONAL ENFORCEMENT. (a) The Joint Legislative Committee | ||
on Constitutional Enforcement is established as a permanent joint | ||
committee of the legislature. The committee is established to | ||
review federal actions that challenge the sovereignty of the state | ||
and of the people for the purpose of determining if the federal | ||
action is unconstitutional. | ||
(b) The committee consists of the following 12 members: | ||
(1) six members of the house of representatives | ||
appointed by the speaker of the house; and | ||
(2) six members of the senate appointed by the | ||
lieutenant governor. | ||
(c) Not more than four house members of the committee may be | ||
members of the same political party. Not more than four senate | ||
members of the committee may be members of the same political party. | ||
(d) Members of the committee serve two-year terms beginning | ||
with the convening of each regular legislative session. | ||
(e) If a vacancy occurs on the committee, the appropriate | ||
appointing officer shall appoint a member of the house or senate, as | ||
appropriate, to serve for the remainder of the unexpired term. | ||
(f) The speaker of the house and the lieutenant governor | ||
shall each designate one member of the committee as a joint chair of | ||
the committee. | ||
(g) The committee shall meet at the call of either joint | ||
chair. | ||
(h) A majority of the members of the committee constitute a | ||
quorum. | ||
Sec. 394.003. COMMITTEE REVIEW OF FEDERAL ACTION. (a) The | ||
committee may review any federal action to determine whether the | ||
action is an unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(b) When reviewing a federal action, the committee shall | ||
consider the plain reading and reasoning of the text of the United | ||
States Constitution and the understood definitions at the time of | ||
the framing and construction of the Constitution by our forefathers | ||
before making a final declaration of constitutionality, as | ||
demonstrated by: | ||
(1) the ratifying debates in the several states; | ||
(2) the understanding of the leading participants at | ||
the constitutional convention; | ||
(3) the understanding of the doctrine in question by | ||
the constitutions of the several states in existence at the time the | ||
United States Constitution was adopted; | ||
(4) the understanding of the United States | ||
Constitution by the first United States Congress; | ||
(5) the opinions of the first chief justice of the | ||
United States Supreme Court; | ||
(6) the background understanding of the doctrine in | ||
question under the English Constitution of the time; and | ||
(7) the statements of support for natural law and | ||
natural rights by the framers and the philosophers admired by the | ||
framers. | ||
(c) Not later than the 180th day after the date the | ||
committee holds its first public hearing to review a specific | ||
federal action, the committee shall vote to determine whether the | ||
action is an unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(d) The committee may determine that a federal action is an | ||
unconstitutional federal action by majority vote. | ||
Sec. 394.004. LEGISLATIVE DETERMINATION. (a) If the | ||
committee determines that a federal action is an unconstitutional | ||
federal action, the committee shall report the determination to the | ||
house of representatives and to the senate during: | ||
(1) the current session of the legislature if the | ||
legislature is convened when the committee makes the determination; | ||
or | ||
(2) the next regular or special session of the | ||
legislature if the legislature is not convened when the committee | ||
makes the determination. | ||
(b) Each house of the legislature shall vote on whether the | ||
federal action is an unconstitutional federal action. If a | ||
majority of the members of each house determine that the federal | ||
action is an unconstitutional federal action, the determination | ||
shall be sent to the governor for approval or disapproval as | ||
provided by Section 14, Article IV, Texas Constitution, regarding | ||
bills. | ||
(c) A federal action is declared by the state to be an | ||
unconstitutional federal action on the day: | ||
(1) the governor approves the vote of the legislature | ||
making the determination; or | ||
(2) the determination would become law if presented to | ||
the governor as a bill and not objected to by the governor. | ||
(d) The secretary of state shall forward official copies of | ||
the declaration 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 the | ||
declaration of unconstitutional federal action be entered in the | ||
Congressional Record. | ||
Sec. 394.005. OTHER DETERMINATIONS OF UNCONSTITUTIONAL | ||
FEDERAL ACTS. (a) This chapter does not limit or alter the | ||
authority of the governor, the attorney general, a statewide | ||
elected official, a state or federal court, a judge or justice, a | ||
state or local appointed or elected official, or the governing body | ||
of a political subdivision of this state to issue a verbal or | ||
written opinion determining a federal action to be | ||
unconstitutional. | ||
(b) An opinion issued under Subsection (a) may be referred | ||
to the committee for review under this chapter. | ||
Sec. 394.006. EFFECT OF DECLARED UNCONSTITUTIONAL FEDERAL | ||
ACTION. (a) A federal action declared to be an unconstitutional | ||
federal action under Section 394.004 has no legal effect in this | ||
state and may not be recognized by this state or a political | ||
subdivision of this state as having legal effect. | ||
(b) The state and a political subdivision of the state may | ||
not spend public money or resources or incur public debt to | ||
implement or enforce a federal action declared to be an | ||
unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(c) A person authorized to enforce the laws of this state | ||
may enforce those laws, including Section 39.03, Penal Code, | ||
against a person who attempts to implement or enforce a federal | ||
action declared to be an unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(d) This chapter does not prohibit a public officer who has | ||
taken an oath to defend the United States Constitution from | ||
interposing to stop acts of the federal government which, in the | ||
officer's best understanding and judgment, violate the United | ||
States Constitution. | ||
(e) Texas officials in federal, state, and local government | ||
shall honor their oaths to preserve, protect, and defend the United | ||
States Constitution and shall act to constitutionally defend this | ||
state and the people of this state. | ||
Sec. 394.007. AUTHORITY OF ATTORNEY GENERAL. (a) The | ||
attorney general may defend the state to prevent the implementation | ||
and enforcement of a federal action declared to be an | ||
unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(b) The attorney general may prosecute a person who attempts | ||
to implement or enforce a federal action declared to be an | ||
unconstitutional federal action using Section 39.03, Penal Code, or | ||
another provision of law. | ||
(c) The attorney general may appear before a grand jury in | ||
connection with an offense the attorney general is authorized to | ||
prosecute under Subsection (b). | ||
(d) The authority to prosecute prescribed by this chapter | ||
does not affect the authority derived from other law to prosecute | ||
the same offenses. | ||
SECTION 3. Chapter 37, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is | ||
amended by adding Section 37.0056 to read as follows: | ||
Sec. 37.0056. DECLARATIONS RELATING TO UNCONSTITUTIONAL | ||
ACTS OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. (a) In this section, "federal | ||
action" and "unconstitutional federal action" have the meanings | ||
assigned by Section 394.001, Government Code. | ||
(b) Any court in this state has original jurisdiction of a | ||
proceeding seeking a declaratory judgment that a federal action | ||
effective in this state is an unconstitutional federal action. | ||
(c) A person is entitled to declaratory relief if the court | ||
determines that a federal action is an unconstitutional federal | ||
action. | ||
(d) In determining whether to grant declaratory relief to a | ||
person under this section, a court: | ||
(1) may not rely solely on the decisions of other | ||
courts interpreting the United States Constitution; and | ||
(2) must rely on the plain meaning of the text of the | ||
United States Constitution and any applicable constitutional | ||
doctrine as understood by the framers of the constitution. | ||
(e) Section 37.008 does not apply to relief sought under | ||
this section. | ||
SECTION 4. (a) Not later than the 30th day following the | ||
effective date of this Act: | ||
(1) the speaker of the house of representatives and | ||
the lieutenant governor shall appoint the initial members of the | ||
Joint Legislative Committee on Constitutional Enforcement | ||
established under Section 394.002, Government Code, as added by | ||
this Act; and | ||
(2) the secretary of state shall forward official | ||
copies of this Act 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 Act be | ||
officially entered in the Congressional Record. | ||
(b) Not later than the 45th day following the effective date | ||
of this Act, the speaker of the house of representatives and the | ||
lieutenant governor shall forward official copies of this Act to | ||
the presiding officers of the legislatures of the several states. | ||
SECTION 5. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives | ||
a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as | ||
provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this | ||
Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this | ||
Act takes effect September 1, 2021. |