Tag Archives: United States Supreme Court

McDaniel: It is our responsibility to protect the Second Amendment.


BY: Chris McDaniel @senatormcdaniel

The political left has, once again, reignited a national debate over the Second Amendment’s application, reminding conservatives that they will never tire in attempting to erode the Constitutional rights of gun owners.

Gun-control advocates complain that the founding fathers never intended firearms to go unregulated, invoking arguments made by United States Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer — a dissenter in the 2008 case of District of Columbia v. Heller, a Supreme Court decision which overturned a Washington, D.C. handgun ban.  As part of his dissent in Heller, he argued that Madison only drafted the Second Amendment because some feared that Congress would call up the state militias and nationalize them. Madison only proposed the amendment, Breyer maintained, to appease skeptics and to “get this document ratified.”

Nevertheless, in a well-reasoned opinion drafted by Justice Antonin Scalia, the Heller majority expressly held that adult citizens, each of us individually, enjoy the right to keep and bear arms.  In so doing, it concluded decades of debate as to whether the Second Amendment protects the rights of all individuals (the individual rights theory) or only those who are members of a militia (the collective rights theory).

Two years later in the case of McDonald v. City of Chicago, the Supreme Court struck down Chicago’s ban on the private ownership of handguns, finding that the right to possess a handgun for self-defense is “fundamental from an American perspective and applies equally to the federal government and the states.”  The Court likewise recognized that the “central component” of the Second Amendment is individual self-defense, noting that “self-defense is a basic right, recognized by many legal systems from ancient times to the present.”

Clearly, controlling precedent repudiates Justice Breyer’s legal guesswork, while strengthening the rights of gun owners.

The Second Amendment’s language is not perplexing: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

And yet, activists propose that the addition of the amendment’s prefatory clause qualifies the rest of the wording by placing a limitation on the people’s right to bear arms.  Such an argument, however, ignores the fact that the amendment was designed to guarantee, not impart, the unalienable right of individuals to keep and bear arms.

Gun control proponents likewise fail to consider the textual certainties of Constitutional construction.  In all six other provisions of the Constitution that mention “the people” the phrase refers to all members of the political community, not merely an unspecified segment or collective.

Although the Second Amendment speaks to the historical need for a militia, its plain language demonstrates the function of the prefatory clause was not to qualify the right, but instead to show why it must be protected.  Recognizing this fact, the Court has held that the prefatory clause serves to clarify the operative clause, but neither limits nor expands its scope.

Contrary interpretations make little sense.  Why would the Constitution’s drafters place a collective right into the middle of the most noble listing of individual rights ever recognized?

Not only do the Court’s recent decisions benefit from textual support, there is no evidence from early common law that the right was intended to apply solely to active militia members.  To the contrary, historical evidence demonstrates the founders’ unyielding dedication to an armed citizenry.

In words and deeds, the Constitution’s contemporaries recognized the Second Amendment as an individual right essential to liberty.

But times have changed, regrettably; and there will be continued demands from the left to curtail our liberties, however incremental.

It is our responsibility to protect the Second Amendment, reminding bureaucrats that the government must not attempt to circumvent our rights with excessive firearm regulatory schemes.

About Chris: Chris is an attorney, conservative commentator and a Republican politician in the Mississippi Senate who has represented the 42nd District, which encompasses part of South Mississippi, since 2008. He resides with his family in Ellisville, Mississippi.

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Filed under Chris McDaniel, Congress, Democrats, Federal Government, Gun Control, Legislature, Mississippi, Mississippi State Senate, Politics, Republican, Second Amendment, State Government

Mitchell: Mississippian’s don’t take advantage of public information


Complaining about too little access to public information has been a lifelong pursuit for me. Still, I think a “D+” grade assigned to Mississippi by a national group is too low.

This state has plenty of good laws, plenty of verbal support for transparency at the highest levels of state government. The train jumps the track in a couple of areas, including enforcement and, frankly, interest by journalists and the public.

Take campaign finance records as one example.

For as long as there has been an Internet, Mississippi secretaries of state have placed the donation and spending reports of every candidate for every office online for anyone, anywhere to see.

There’s plenty of room to improve the reports themselves and how they can be found and searched. There’s no excuse for not making the improvements. But the reports are open to public view.

Yet how many local papers write stories about where candidates are getting their campaign funds? Not many. No local TV crew mines this type of information.

Much the same is true for the website seethespending.org. It’s a fairly new site operated by the Mississippi Center for Public Policy. It offers a wealth of information. Wonder how much your county spent on cell phones? (Grenada County spent $14,071.89 with AT&T Mobility in 2010.) The information is there, usually easy to locate.

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Filed under Haley Barbour, Law Enforcement, Legislature, MAEP, MDA, MDOC, MDOT, Medicaid, Mississippi, Opinion, PERS, Politics, Public Safety, Public Service Commission, Retirement, Revenue, SLRP, Spending, State Bonds, State Government, Taxes, Transportation, Treasurer

Governor Bryant on ObamaCare in Mississippi: “No money is free.”


The recent Supreme Court ruling on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, or more commonly called ObamaCare, has left many people asking what’s next – and what does it mean here in Mississippi.

While some people say ObamaCare will come as an economic boost with “free” money, the reality is simple: no money is free.

So let’s talk about the facts as they are in Mississippi.

During fiscal year 2012, the Mississippi Division of Medicaid – the agency in charge of operating most of the Medicaid program in Mississippi – required $3.62 billion in federal funds and $763 million in state funds to directly administer the Medicaid program. These figures don’t include funds used by other agencies to meet their own Medicaid program responsibilities.

That means the conservative total cost to operate the Medicaid program in Mississippi during fiscal year 2012 was more than $4.38 billion as of July of this year. Remember, federal tax dollars aren’t “free,” they are your tax dollars, so that’s more than $4.38 billion of your money spent on one year of Medicaid in Mississippi. This is without the expansions the Obama administration is attempting to force.

The federal government wants to give Medicaid to more people – more than what your money is already paying for.

The federal government also promised to initially pay 100 percent of the Medicaid expansion costs for the first three years of ObamaCare.

What you do not hear is how the cost burden increasingly shifts to Mississippi taxpayers.

According to a report requested by the Mississippi Division of Medicaid, the total cost to implement ObamaCare in Mississippi is more than $1.6 billion over seven years. This expansion could result in one in three Mississippians being on Medicaid, with an additional cost starting at $68 million and increasing to $427 million annually.

That’s a large burden for the Mississippi taxpayer to assume.

There are also hidden expansion costs. Increasing the Medicaid rolls will immediately result in increased administrative costs.

In Mississippi, those costs would be about $17 million the first year and $36 million the second year. The Mississippi Division of Medicaid estimates the administrative cost to the state for the first three years of Medicaid expansion is $81 million.

What’s more, these expansion costs will be added to the enormous amount of money Mississippi already spends on Medicaid.

In fiscal year 2012, for every one dollar Mississippi spent to administer the Medicaid program, it spent about three dollars on K-12 education. If we expand Medicaid, that ratio will get smaller very quickly.

Also in fiscal year 2012, Mississippi spent more than seven times as much money on the existing Medicaid program as we did on economic development and most of our state public safety efforts combined!

No matter on what side of the political spectrum you align yourself, when you look at the bottom line of a potential Medicaid expansion in Mississippi, it is clear we cannot afford this enormous burden.

It would rob our resources for education, public safety and job creation and could very well result in tax increases. Undoubtedly, it would compromise our state’s resources and leave us with a bill we cannot pay.

Mississippi can do better, and there are real solutions to improving health care.

To start, each of us must assume personal responsibility for our own health and our own choices. Lifestyles that includes regular exercise and proper diets can help shrink Mississippi’s obesity rate and the chronic diseases like diabetes that accompany it.

Activities like smoking erode our health, and we must do all in our power to fight the epidemic of teen pregnancy – an issue that has far-reaching consequences for our state.

At the core of improved health care is job creation. We must continue working to create an environment where businesses flourish so Mississippians can secure sound employment and fund their own health insurance. We should also purchase health insurance across state lines and work to lower insurance costs by pooling employees of small businesses.

Mississippi can and will do better. As governor, I will fight to protect our future – our education, our safety and our jobs – and that means that I will resist any effort to expand Medicaid in this state.

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Filed under Budget, Education, Entitlements, Federal Government, Governor, health, Insurance, Medicaid, Mississippi, Obamacare, Opinion, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, Spending, State Government

Mississippi Trial Lawyer advocates taxing internet purchases to participate in ObamaCare Medicaid expansion, shore up PERS system.


BY: B. Keith Plunkett

Philip Thomas, a Jackson trial lawyer, advocates raising taxes in Mississippi to pay for ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion. He also would use the money to help solve the financial problems of the Public Employee Retirement System.

He writes of ObamaCare expansion:

Gov. Phil Bryant and other Mississippi Republican leaders oppose accepting the Medicaid expansion in the Affordable Care Act because the State can’t afford it. The expansion would provide healthcare coverage to an additional 250,000–400,000 Mississippians. That’s on top of the 600,000 Mississippians covered by the program now.

The federal government will pick up 100% of the costs at first, and 90% of the costs after 3 years. Mississippi’s 10% share would be $160 million per year. In return for the $160 million, hundreds of thousands of Mississippians would receive healthcare.

In addition, billions of federal dollars would enter the state’s economy to pay for that health care. And this money would not benefit the economy of just a few areas the way casinos and auto manufacturing plants have. There are hospitals and nursing homes in every community that would have more money to pay employees if Medicaid expands. This sounds like a great investment to me, if Mississippi can figure out how to pay for it.

After spending $160 million of the estimated $303 million in revenue generated from raising taxes on internet purchases, Thomas says he would spend the rest of the money on the PERS system:

Mississippi should use whatever is needed from the rest of internet sales tax collections to fix the State’s Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS) when it blows up. And it’s going to blow up.

In an article back in October 2011 over proposals in the state legislature by Republican Representatives Mark Formby and Jessica Upshaw to study an internet sales tax, I wrote this:

If brick and mortar shops want to compete with internet sales then they need to move with the market. Not try to have legislators hold back the progress of others so that they can compete.

Of course, Thomas isn’t advocating legislating fairness to businesses who don’t move with the times. He’s advocating sucker punching Mississippi’s consumers in order to pay for more big government and entitlement spending. Either way, it’s meddlesome government engineering and should be rejected.

Whether Republican or Democrat, Trial lawyer or business person, raising taxes on consumers or businesses is regressive, and it’s bad policy.

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Filed under Budget, contributor, Democrats, Entitlements, Federal Government, Governor, Insurance, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Obamacare, Opinion, PERS, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, Retirement, Spending, State Government, Taxes

Readers top 5 picks of the week on Mississippi PEP


This weeks top 5 stories as decided by Mississippi PEP readers cover the issues of Women’s health and abortion, Voter ID, Mississippi’s upcoming challenge to Obamacare, and the announcement of a newly formed Atheist lobbying group expected to be roaming the halls of the state capitol in 2013.

Sign up for the Mississippi PEP Newsletter and get links to exclusive content you may have missed. And codes to those pages only Mississippi PEP Subscribers get access to.

Here is a list of the top five:

  1. Pro Life Mississippi President Dana Chisholm Statement on Judge Daniel Jordan’s ruling in “Admitting Privileges” Abortion Law
  2. Chicken Little Syndrome: Voter ID
  3. Chris McDaniel: Despite SCOTUS Ruling on Healthcare Law, “Right-to-Privacy” Contradiction Offers Glimmer of Hope for Mississippi Challenge
  4. Breaking: Judge Jordan extends restraining order on “Admitting Privileges” abortion law.
  5. Hey Mississippi! The Godless are Coming!

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Filed under Abortion, Atheists, Chris McDaniel, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Mississippi, Obamacare, Voter ID

Congressman Palazzo comments on House Repeal of ObamaCare


Congressman Steven Palazzo released the following statement today after voting once more to fully repeal the health care law.  Palazzo is a cosponsor of today’s repeal bill, H.R. 6079, the Repeal of Obamacare Act, which passed the House of Representatives with a bipartisan vote of 244-185.

“When the Supreme Court ruled to uphold the law as a tax, they weren’t saying it’s good policy,” Palazzo stated.  “What the justices reaffirmed is that this is indeed a multibillion dollar tax, and that it is unconstitutional to force a massive Medicaid expansion upon states like Mississippi who cannot afford it.  The Supreme Court also reaffirmed for myself, my colleagues, and for millions upon millions of Americans that there is still a need to fully repeal this law.”

Wednesday’s vote was one of more than 30 that the House of Representatives has taken to repeal, defund or dismantle the law.  To date, seven provisions have been fully repealed or had funding rescinded and three programs have already been halted, including:  the 1099 tax reporting requirement for businesses, free choice vouchers, and the unworkable CLASS Act Program.

“With today’s vote, we are listening to the majority of the American people who do not want this law,” Palazzo continued.   “And we are renewing our commitment to bring real, step-by-step solutions so that Americans have access to the care they need, from the doctor they choose, at a price they can afford.”

Mississippi Congressman Steven Palazzo made the following comments from the floor of the U.S. House regarding the repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

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Filed under Federal Government, Mississippi, Obamacare, Politics, Republican, Steven Palazzo

Video Update–What’s Happening Now on Mississippi PEP


Follow links below for content mentioned in the video.

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Filed under Abortion, Ballot Initiative, Education, Gulf Coast, Mississippi, Personhood, Politics, Vlogs, Voter ID

Mississippi PEP Rundown: This week across the state.


Some news from across the state for the week of July 2.

Statewide

Highway Patrol says 1 fatal, 95 DUIs on Fourth 

Miss. black lawmakers support Medicaid expansion

Southwest Mississippi

Adams County tax assessment up $3.8M 

Pike County readies for oil ‘storm’

North Mississippi

Tupelo leaders approve borrowing money for roads program 

A Mississippi Tradition: Politics in Jacinto to celebrate 4th of July 

Army soldier injured in Afghanistan, okay 

East Mississippi

Post Office mail processing plant leaves Meridian for Jackson

Poplar Springs Historic District Meeting Called

Gulf Coast

Plan has deputies patrolling all Diamondhead streets 

MS Deep Sea Fishing Rodeo officials wanted BP Grant Money but were denied

Central Mississippi/Metro Jackson

Developer Sues Jackson Mayor and JRA 

Construction on Farish Street to begin

Delta Region

Greenwood doctor involved in murder plot request bail

Pine Belt

Interim sheriff named in Jasper County

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Filed under Mississippi, News

Mississippi PEP readers: Following ObamaCare ruling what’s the status of McDaniel/Bryant challenge?


A few Mississippi PEP readers, in fact A LOT of Mississippi PEP readers, tuned in for our podcast interview with Senator Chris McDaniel. We’re glad so many of you are enjoying the format. We’ll keep improving the audio quality of the podcasts as we continue.

Many readers wanted to know, following the ruling by the Supreme Court on ObamaCare, “What is the status of the case Senator McDaniel filed on behalf of Governor Phil Bryant?”

Ask and ye shall receive.

Here’s what Senator McDaniel told us this morning:

On the status: “It is still pending. The privacy claim still survives. We are presently briefing the issue.”

On the timing: “We should have a decision within 90 days, but that may be longer.”

On the place: “United States District Court, Southern District of Mississippi.” 

Keep the questions coming. We’ll work on getting the answers. And don’t forget to give us your comments via the Mississippi PEP comment line at 662.205.6737. We may use the comments on future podcasts.

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Filed under Chris McDaniel, Federal Government, Governor, Mississippi, Obamacare, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, State Government

SCOTUS ObamaCare ruling-Mississippians React: Mississippi TEA Party Chairman Roy Nicholson


Roy Nicholson, Chairman of the Mississippi TEA Party, released the following statement in response to the Supreme Court ruling on ObamaCare:

“With its 5-4 ruling upholding Obamacare the US Supreme Court has joined with the Executive and Legislative branches of the federal government in abandoning the Constitution, the Rule of Law, and with that ruling abandoned the People.  All of us are now simply chattel of the government to be used and ordered about as they choose.   The history books will mark this date as the day our constitutional republic was killed.  It will now rest with We The People to decide if it will be resurrected or left to rot in the shallow grave dug for it.

Where is the weeping and wailing?  Where is the anger and outrage?  Do the people of the country realize what has just been stolen from them?  Do the people of the world recognize that the shadow of darkness is now fallen upon them as well and that there remains no defender of their feeble freedoms?  The all out oppression of all people has begun.

Those “occupiers” now controlling the three federal branches of government have joined together in rejecting all Constitutional restraint and in doing so they have severely violated their oaths to support and defend the Constitution of the United States.  Together they now stand as blatant usurpers of power and have reduced our constitutional republic, along with all of its freedoms, to nothing more than a dictatorial junta.  Becoming a banana republic is next.

When a gang of criminals subvert legitimate government offices and seize all power to themselves without the real consent of the governed their every act and edict is of itself illegal and is outside the bounds of the Rule of Law.  In such cases submission is treason.  Treason against the Constitution and the valid legitimate government of the nation to which we have pledged our allegiance for years.  To resist by all means that are right in the eyes of God is not rebellion or insurrection, it is patriotic resistance to invasion. 

May all of us fall on our faces before the Heavenly Judge, repent of our sins, and humbly cry out to Him for mercy on our country.  And, may godly courageous leaders rise up in His wisdom and power to lead us in displacing the criminal invaders from their seats and restore our constitutional republic.”


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Filed under Mississippi, Obamacare, Politics