Help us pass the You can read the text of RTBA by clicking the Draft Legislation tab above, or you can start by reading a summary of the legislation below. Following that summary is a description of our strategy for passing RTBA, and then a call to action.
Most Congressmen are lawyers, and many others are businessmen. They know what “fiduciary responsibility” is. For Members of Congress, fiduciary responsibility means reading each word of every bill before they vote. But Congress has not met this duty for a long time. Instead . . .
There's a basic principle at stake here. America was founded on the slogan, “No taxation without representation.” A similar slogan applies to this situation:
We hold this truth to be self-evident, that those in Congress who vote on legislation they have not read, have not represented their constituents. They have misrepresented them. And since Congress has repeatedly committed “legislation without representation,” strong measures to prohibit these Congressional misrepresentations are both justified and required. To this end we have created the “Read the Bills Act (RTBA).” RTBA requires that . . .
| Submission Committee Leo Hamel R W Kerr Paul Davis Winnona Christeson Thomas Fultz Peter R. Abeln David Chapman Donald D. Franklin Jim Fuller Gregory Utas Robert S. Moore Leslie C. Hardison Daniel J. Dunn Craig B. Googan Benjamin Rousch James D. Meyer James Marquart Stephanie Adams Lisa Z. Morgan David C. Ripley Robert W. Shubring Clarence Garnder Stan Jones Russell J. Kominski Melanie Marshall Jeffrey S. Schulman, Jr. Maria Spicer Dan Steelandt William W. Bell David W. Landram V.K. Benson Frank Bowman Jessica Hathaway Joseph Hegener Beck Horne Matthew M. Hosler Geoffrey H. Hunter Shane Killian Owen Mann Thomas E. Regneir Leslie J. Russell Kempes Trager Mary Warner Kevin C. Kuhns Peter Skaates Craig P. Thompson George R. Whitfield Bernard S. Browning Jacob Burckhardt Michael Ciulla Kerry G. Daniel Marc L. Guttman Robert L. Morgan Ken Mosher Randy Norton Victoria E. Pate Joel G. Rauch John Schultz Kirk Singh Edward W. Sudduth Emil R. Wolanski Dr. Warren Barr Richard K. Chaplin David Erickson Dorsey J. Glenn Kenneth Obenski Zach Sycks Michael T. Foley Shal Loeser Kay Samalin Charles Braly Distributors Daniel Edgar Robert G. Howard Robert Larkin Thomas Anderson Eugene L. Bivins Mann Page Ciesemier David del Rio Richard T. Hogan Ronald G. Holley Herb C. Johnson Andrew Marold Robert C. Sheets Judith A. Shellabarger Chris Taylor David A. Eckhardt Andrew D. Bourdon Brian R. Key Mike Spalding Andrew L. Sullivan Nancy Woods Duane Bates Constitution Party of WA Anthony J. Diliberto Kamarat McWashington Dr. Mike Rosing Darrell D. White Edward J. Wirzulis Walter Uhlman Lynn Cunningham Noel Gibeson J. Roderick Greig Louise Javra Joseph R. Jordan Robert L. Knowlden Michael Maloy Joyce E. Manett Yuri Mankovskiy Ruth Matheny Joe Moorman Olivier Schreiber Jermainie J. Schultz Paul B. Simon Steven Smith Christopher K. Walters Matthew Weigel James A. West Verlin Whipple Gregory A. Wolfe Gil Magno Richard Schwartzman Thomas J. Boyle Mallory Montgomery Steven Pilchman |
The effects of these provisions will be profound . . .
- Congress will have to slow down. This means the pace of government growth will also slow.
- Bills will shrink, be less complicated, and contain fewer subjects, so that Congress will be able to endure hearing them read.
- Fewer bad proposals will be passed due to “log-rolling.”
- No more secret clauses will be inserted into bills at the last moment.
- Government should shrink as old laws reach their sunset date, and have to be read for the first time before they can be renewed.
And all of these things will enable a larger DownsizeDC.org to more effectively lobby Congress for small government.
Part 2: Our Strategy for passing RTBA |
Our plan for passing this legislation is simple, but powerful.
- We have submitted a copy of RTBA to every member of Congress.
- We are asking every member of the House and Senate to sponsor this legislation and work for its passage.
- We are mounting a campaign to recruit thousands, and perhaps millions of Americans to lobby Congress to support RTBA.
- We are promoting this campaign with a variety of tactics, from Internet networking, to media interviews, to whatever it takes.
- We will run targeted radio ads, letting citizens know that their Congressman is failing to support this badly needed reform.
The need for this reform is so self-evident that nearly every person in America should support it, and few oppose it. We see no reason why we should not be able to overwhelm Congress with calls to pass this legislation.
- We dare Congress not to pass it. The more they resist, the larger and stronger we will grow.
- We dare anyone to challenge it in Court. The more the lobbyists attempt to defeat this reform, the larger and stronger we will grow.
- We dare the Courts to declare it un-Constitutional. If they do, we will grow larger and stronger as a result — probably big enough to begin a campaign to amend the Constitution to forbid “LEGISLATION without representation.”
There is simply no reason that any normal, tax-paying American should oppose RTBA. And the more the “powers that be” resist these reforms, the larger and stronger we will grow.
We win either way. And thus, we believe, we will win in the end.
Part 3: A Call to Action |
You can help pass RTBA. All you have to do is register to use our easy Electronic Lobbyist system and send a message to your Representative and your Senators asking them to pass RTBA. Registering to use our system will also enable you to lobby Congress on other issues, and to receive our free email newsletter, Downsizer-Dispatch. This free email newsletter will keep you posted on progress with RTBA and other Downsize DC lobbying campaigns. To send your message to Congress in support of RTBA click here.
Thank you.
Jim Babka
President
DownsizeDC.org
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