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          CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
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               WHEREAS, Discarding a century of precedent, the United States  | 
      
      
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        Supreme Court, in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission,  | 
      
      
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        swept aside long-standing campaign finance laws and cleared the way  | 
      
      
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        for unlimited corporate spending in elections; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, The five justices in the majority ruled that  | 
      
      
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        political spending is a form of protected speech under the First  | 
      
      
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        Amendment and that the government may not prevent corporations from  | 
      
      
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        giving money to support or oppose individual candidates for public  | 
      
      
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        office; the United States Constitution, however, does not mention  | 
      
      
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        corporations and endows only natural persons with the right to  | 
      
      
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        speak, assemble, and petition; there is no evidence that the  | 
      
      
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        framers of the constitution wished to extend to corporations the  | 
      
      
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        same rights as natural persons in the electoral context; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Corporations, as the four dissenting judges noted in  | 
      
      
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        their opinion, are legal entities with no consciences, beliefs,  | 
      
      
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        feelings, thoughts, or desires; these entities help structure and  | 
      
      
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        facilitate the activities of human beings but are not themselves  | 
      
      
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        members of "We the People," by whom and for whom the constitution  | 
      
      
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        was established; the conditional rights of corporations are granted  | 
      
      
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        not by the constitution but rather through the legislative  | 
      
      
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        deliberations of Congress and the states; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Unlike natural persons, corporations are granted  | 
      
      
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        certain privileges, including limited liability, perpetual life,  | 
      
      
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        and favorable treatment of the accumulation and distribution of  | 
      
      
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        assets, that enhance their ability to attract capital and to  | 
      
      
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        maximize the return on their shareholders' investments; yet these  | 
      
      
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        very privileges give corporations the financial capacity to drown  | 
      
      
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        out the individual voices of natural persons, which is why Congress  | 
      
      
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        and the states have rightly sought to restrict the influence of  | 
      
      
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        corporate power on our political system; moreover, corporations may  | 
      
      
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        be under the control of citizens of foreign countries who are  | 
      
      
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        ineligible to participate in our elections; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Article V of the U.S. Constitution empowers the  | 
      
      
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        people and the states to correct egregious Supreme Court rulings by  | 
      
      
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        means of constitutional amendment, and 7 of the extant 27  | 
      
      
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        amendments were enacted for just such a purpose; the tide of  | 
      
      
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        corporate money that has been unleashed in the wake of Citizens  | 
      
      
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        United deeply threatens the free speech protections of individuals,  | 
      
      
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        and the amendment process must be used to reverse this erroneous and  | 
      
      
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        damaging decision; now, therefore, be it | 
      
      
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               RESOLVED, That the 84th Legislature of the State of Texas  | 
      
      
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        hereby respectfully urge the Congress of the United States to  | 
      
      
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        propose and submit to the states for ratification an amendment to  | 
      
      
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        the United States Constitution that overturns Citizens United v.  | 
      
      
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        Federal Election Commission, clearly establishing that the  | 
      
      
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        spending of money to influence elections shall not be construed as  | 
      
      
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        speech under the First Amendment and may be regulated by federal,  | 
      
      
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        state, or local government, and clarifying that only natural  | 
      
      
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        persons are protected by constitutional rights and that  | 
      
      
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        corporations, limited liability companies, and other artificial  | 
      
      
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        entities derive their rights through the legislative deliberations  | 
      
      
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        of Congress and the states and remain subject to regulation by the  | 
      
      
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        people through federal, state, or local law; and, be it further | 
      
      
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               RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official  | 
      
      
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        copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to  | 
      
      
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        the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of  | 
      
      
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        Representatives of the United States Congress, and to all the  | 
      
      
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        members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that  | 
      
      
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        this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a  | 
      
      
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        memorial to the Congress of the United States of America. |