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In reply to the discussion: Release of tax returns as a requirement [View all]onenote
(46,230 posts)29. No. I'm not sure what would remotely make you think so.
And as for your apparent belief that acts of Congress are not subservient to the Constitution -- that goes against over 200 years of jurisprudence.
Read in a light most favorable to you, your point apparently is not that Congress can ignore the Constitution, but rather that acts of Congress that are made "in furtherance of" the Constitution are the supreme law of the land. Well, that's true. But what provision of the Constitution would a congressional mandate for the disclosure of tax returns be in furtherance of? The answer is that there is no Constitutional provision that such a law would be "in furtherance of".
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Wasn't California going to pass a bill to make this a ballot access requirement?
LonePirate
Jan 2017
#2
I think you're on the right track and they should be considered as part of the financial disclosures
Arkansas Granny
Jan 2017
#3
What I think is irrelevant; if it's not in the Constitution it doesn't matter.
brooklynite
Jan 2017
#6
But the KGOP is all about state's rights. If states pass laws barring anyone from being on the
OregonBlue
Jan 2017
#7
The fact that you like to make up your own version of the law doesn't make it real law.
onenote
Jan 2017
#26
The bounds of the Constitution have been expanded since Hamilton proposed a national bank.
eniwetok
Jan 2017
#43
Actually, it may be OK for the individual states to require tax returns to be on the ballot.
WillowTree
Jan 2017
#33
I agree with half your statement. The other half is a legal and logical fallacy.
LanternWaste
Jan 2017
#34
All candidates need to be vetted in regards to money owed, and what, countries/mobsters
sarcasmo
Jan 2017
#40