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  • Ankara: An Ethnic Lobby Pushes State Legislatures Into Challenging D

    AN ETHNIC LOBBY PUSHES STATE LEGISLATURES INTO CHALLENGING DORMANT FOREIGN AFFAIRS DOCTRINE

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    Feb 18 2013

    JTW

    Since the founding of the United States, the division of federal and
    state authority under the Constitution has been much debated. The
    Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which emerged in the New
    Jersey Plan on June 15, 1787, along with the Foreign Commerce Clause
    formed the so-called dormant foreign affairs doctrine. According
    to this doctrine, the U.S. Constitution, federal laws and treaties
    supersede state laws to be "the supreme Law of the Land". State
    laws must yield to the laws of Congress, made in pursuance of the
    Constitution, or some treaty made under the authority of the United
    States (see Douglas v. Seacoast Products , 431 U.S. 265, 277 -279
    [1977]). Consequently, the Supreme Court considers any state law
    that contradicts a federal action that could be executed in a form
    of treaty, federal statute, or express executive branch policy,
    to be unconstitutional.

    State involvement in U.S. foreign policy was barely significant
    until 1980s, when to voice opinion against the apartheid regime,
    over half of the states adopted sanctions against South Africa. In
    the late 1990s, several state legislatures and localities targeted
    the military regime in Burma, and in 2000s - the regime in Sudan for
    genocidal crimes in Darfur. But most of these state laws have been
    targeted by litigation. For example, in Crosby v. National Foreign
    Trade Council case, the Supreme Court struck down a Massachusetts
    law that imposed sanctions against companies doing business in Burma.

    Over the past couple of decades, the Armenian-American lobby has been
    actively targeting the nations of Turkey and Azerbaijan, the arch-foes
    of Armenia. In case of Turkey, Armenian-American special interests
    seek state-level acknowledgement of the claims of Armenian genocide
    in the Ottoman Empire; in case of Azerbaijan - push for recognition
    of the so-called Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), an unrecognized
    client regime established in the parts of Azerbaijan occupied by
    Armenian military.

    On May 17, 2012, the State of Rhode Island House of Representatives
    adopted Resolution H8180 calling on President and Congress to
    recognize NKR. In November 2012, California Assemblyman Katcho
    Achadjian and State Senator Kevin De Leon, hosted the self-proclaimed
    foreign minister of NKR at the State Capitol in Sacramento. During the
    reception, Senator De Leon asserted that California legislature should
    recognize the NKR independence. Yet according to the U.S. Department
    of State, the United States does not recognize NKR and considers
    the comprising territory to be a part of Azerbaijan. Furthermore,
    the U.S., along with France and Russia, is a co-chair of the OSCE
    Minsk Group, an international body mediating a solution for the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. The ethnic-lobby-driven resolutions
    in Rhode Island and California represent a certain impediment to this
    mediating role of the federal government.

    On the first day of the California Assembly in December 2012,
    California Assemblymen Katcho Achadjian and Mike Gatto introduced
    Assembly Joint Resolution 2 calling to recognize World War I-era
    inter-ethnic atrocities in the Ottoman Empire as genocide against
    Armenians. Armenian-American interest groups in California and other
    states have repeatedly lobbied for similar resolutions. But without an
    appropriate decision of the International Court of Justice (see Case
    T-346/03 ), such state resolutions contradict the Constitution, as
    neither the U.S. Government nor Congress recognize Armenian genocide.

    The Armenian-American lobby's influence on state legislatures yields
    a pioneering new tendency. While previously state legislatures
    interfered in foreign affairs only to express a position on issues
    of human rights violations or commerce, they never did so to satisfy
    an antagonism of a U.S.-based ethnic voting block against a foreign
    nation. In this sense, Armenian-American example may be a disturbing
    precedent for other ethnic lobbies that want to use state government
    to settle foreign scores by circumventing federal jurisdiction.

    By Rafiga Gurbanzade 18 February 2013 Journal of Turkish Weekly

    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/147280/an-ethnic-lobby-pushes-state-legislatures-into-challenging-dormant-foreign-affairs-doctrine.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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