Yes, he did, and so did Rawle
Hence, the term guarantee, indicates that the United States are authorized to oppose, and if possible, prevent every state in the Union from relinquishing the republican form of government, and as auxiliary means, they are expressly authorized and required to employ their force on the application of the constituted authorities of each state, "to repress domestic violence."If a faction should attempt to subvert the government of a state for the purpose of destroying its republican form, the paternal power of the Union could thus be called forth to subdue it.
William Rawle
The means of maintaining a republican form of government is by having the States call for help if a situation was more than they could handle.
BTW- The federal government using force inside a State without that States permission is directly CONTRARY to a Republican form of government.
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Ill probably regret asking, but what is your legal source for such a broad statement?
"The federal government, then, appears to be the organ through which the united republics communicate with foreign nations, and with each other. Their submission to its operation is voluntary: its councils, its sovereignty is an emanation from theirs, not a flame by which they have been consumed, nor a vortex in which they are swallowed up. Each is still a perfect state, still sovereign, still independent, and still capable, should the occasion require, to resume the exercise of its functions, as such, in the most unlimited extent.
St. George Tucker View of the Constitution of the United States 1803 [paragraph 337]
I would like to ask again for your legal source for the assertion that the federal government can waltz into the interior of a State at will.
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Have the provisions of Article I Section 10 of the Constitution requiring consent of Congress for certain things been overcome by something Im not thinking of?
Article 1 Section 10 makes no mention of insurrection, rebellion, domestic violence or a republican form of government, so what was your point?
Yes, he did, and so did Rawl
No he didnt and neither did Rawl, at least neither did so in the citations you have provided. We are at loggerheads here, taking different meaning from the same words.
Their submission to its operation is voluntary
So they voluntarily ceded some degree of jurisdiction which still negates your assertion that the federal government has NO jurisdiction inside one of the respective States.....
I would like to ask again for your legal source for the assertion that the federal government can waltz into the interior of a State at will.
I didnt assert that the federal government can waltz into the interior of a State at will. You asked Do you have any evidence to support your assertion? when my assertion was but it looks like a request from the State is only needed in the case of domestic violence and that no such request is needed in the cases of invasion or insurrection and I responded to that. I did not write at will I wrote in the cases of invasion or insurrection and I specifically indicated they couldnt come in merely at will in the case of domestic violence.
Article 1 Section 10 makes no mention of insurrection, rebellion, domestic violence or a republican form of government, so what was your point?
You wrote NO jurisdiction which I took to be no jurisdiction at all of any kind and an expansion beyond insurrection, rebellion, domestic violence and a republican form of government. My point was that Article 1 Section 10 states areas in which consent of Congress is required and therefore the federal government does have some jurisdiction. I take it you agree there are circumstances when the federal government does have some jurisdiction within the respective states even if assistance was not requested. I take it you believe that until a State requests assistance, the federal government has no jurisdiction in regard to insurrection, rebellion, or domestic violence inside one of the respective States.