Author Topic: Should Texas secede? Question may appear on Republican primary ballot  (Read 310 times)

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bkepley

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Luqman Adeniyi | The Texas Tribune

Texas already seceded once — in 1861, by popular vote in a statewide election.

But the Texas Nationalist Movement wants a repeat a century and a half later, and thinks the March GOP primary is the place to start.

The Nederland-based Texas independence group is circulating a petition aimed at getting a non-binding vote onto the GOP primary ballot over whether "the state of Texas should reassert its status as an independent nation."

Their goal? 75,000 signatures from registered voters by Dec. 1 — more than the 66,894 the Texas Secretary of State's office says the group needs to get the language on the ballot.

Even if the Texas Nationalist Movement gets enough signatures, such a vote would be little more than symbolic. Academics agree that Texas cannot secede from the United States, and point to a post-Civil War Supreme Court ruling, Texas v. White, as evidence. 

More here: http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=1246882#.VfiA4ct0yUk

Offline PzLdr

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Re: Should Texas secede? Question may appear on Republican primary ballot
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2015, 06:07:58 pm »
If they do, I'm GTT!
Hillary's Self-announced Qualifications: She Stood Up To Putin...She Sits to Pee