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HILLARY CAN'T CONSTITUTIONALLY BE ELECTED PRESIDENT - OR VICE-PRESIDENT EITHER
Jon Christian Ryter ^ | 06/23/04 | Jon Christian Ryter

Posted on 06/23/2004 9:09:44 AM PDT by ServesURight

Even before his term of office expired at noon on January 20, 2001, President William Jefferson Clinton was quietly querying friendly members of the U.S. Supreme Court to see if they would be inclined to rule that the 25th Amendment prevented a president from serving more than two terms in the White House, or if there might be five justices on the high court who could be legally persuaded that the 25th Amendment didn't exclude the president from serving more than two terms, only that it prevented him from serving more than two consecutive terms. If the Justices could be convinced to frame a ruling based on what Clinton believed was "the spirit" in which the 25th Amendment was offered for ratification rather than the high court adhering to the letter of the language within the amendment, Clinton might have been able to return to the presidential political arena in 2004 and challenge the son of his old nemesis. However, the consensus Clinton sought from the justices of the high court escaped him. It was the view of the US Supreme Court that the 25th Amendment was clear and unambiguous. No man could hold the office of President for more than two terms. And, any president serving two years and one day of the unexpired term of a former president was ineligible to seek re-election at all.

There has been some idle chatter in Democratic circles of Kerry offering the vice presidential slot on the Democratic ticket to Bill Clinton—even though Hillary tried hard to buy it for herself. However, the 25th Amendment prevents Bill Clinton from being placed on the ticket as Kerry's vice presidential running mate just as Article II of the Constitution prevents Hillary Clinton from constitutionally assuming for the job. In fact, for precisely the same reason that Bill Clinton can't serve as vice president, neither can Hillary. Why? Because she cannot constitutionally fill the vacancy caused by the death, resignation, impeachment and removal of any US president under whom she served. The Constitution of the United States actually prevents Hillary—or any woman for that matter—from ascending to the office of President even though several women have already run for the office.

The first woman to run for President of the United States was Victoria Woodhull, a stockbroker and "protégé" of railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt. Woodhull ran for President on the Equal Rights Party ticket in 1872. Belva Lockwood, the first woman admitted to practice law before the US Supreme Court became that party's candidate for president in 1884 and 1888. Both women ran on a platform for which there was no constituency that would vote for them—not even themselves. Neither woman could vote. Nor, for that matter, could any other woman in America until the ratification of the 19th Amendment on Aug. 18, 1920. While the 19th Amendment provided women with the right to vote, it did not provide them the right to seek the highest office in the land—a legality that has been overlooked by office seekers, male and female, since 1920.

In 1964 US Senator Margaret Chase Smith [R-ME] became the first woman to have her name placed in nominattion for President by a major political party. Smith was nominated by Sen. George Aiken that year. The nomination ultimately went to Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater who lost in the general election to President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Because women were not considered viable candidates for the office of the President, their candidacy was viewed only as evidence that the party hierarchy, whether Democrat or Republican, was solidly behind women's suffrage—particularly when the National Organization of Women [NOW] became a strong feminist advocacy voice in American politics in the 1960s. In 1984, pressured by NOW to place a woman on the ballot, Walter "Fritz" Mondale (who was running against Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush) selected Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro [D-NY] as his running mate. Although Mondale and Ferraro lost in the biggest election upset since 1820 when John Quincy Adams won only one electoral vote in his fight to win the presidency from James Madison, Ferraro has the distinction of going into the history books as the first female vice presidential nominee of a major political party. Mondale entered the history books as the man who won only his home State of Minnesota—and its 13 electoral votes—in the Election of 1984. Had Mondale won the election, a Constitutional crisis would have resulted since Ferraro could not have legally succeeded Mondale if he died in office or otherwise became incapacitated without a clarification from the US Supreme Court, or through a constitutional amendment that erases the gender distinctions in Article II, Section 1. In an interesting side note to Ferraro's candidacy in 1984, the Republicans captured 57% of all of the female votes that year. It seems that, other than the diehard party loyalists and feminists, not even the women of America wanted a woman anywhere near the White House—except, perhaps, as First Lady.

Few Americans are cognizant of the fact that an important legal question exists that has not been constitutionally addressed. The feminists believe the 19th Amendment degenderized the office of President of the United States. The evolutionary nature of the election process, combined with the belief of most Americans that, someday, a woman will become President, together with the unchallenged legal precedents when women have sought the office have, in the view of the feminists, solved the male gendered presidential issue without the need of interference from the Supreme Court, or a constitutional amendment.

When Victoria California Claflin Woodhull announced she was seeking the office of President of the United States in the 1872, she was 34 years of age—one year less than required by the Constitution. The unflattering argument was raised that aside from the fact that Vanderbilt's mistress was too young to seek the office of the presidency, only men were eligible to run for elective federal office since the Constitution itself barred women from voting and, by extension, from holding office (thus the justification of the legal argument raised by Yale law professor Akhill Reed Amar, below), Woodhull's benefactor, Cornelius Vanderbilt, used his influence to make certain that Woodhull was allowed to run. In fact, Vanderbilt structured a bond issue to finance her campaign. The bonds would "mature" only if Woodhull was elected president—which, of course, could not happen under any circumstance since Woodhull was only 34 years old when she ran (and even moreso since her running mate was Frederick Douglas, the former slave.). Furthermore, the Woodhull-Douglas ticket was not on any ballot in any State in the union. The Equal Rights Party garnered only slightly more than 15,000 votes nationwide.

When she met Vanderbilt, Woodhull was a fortuneteller in a medicine show. As she read his palm, Vanderbilt became smitten by the sexually outspoken, gregarious woman and invited her to join him in New York. Although she was married to Dr. Canning Woodhull, the medicine show owner, she became Vanderbilt's mistress. He set Woodhull and her sister, Tennessee Claflin, up in a brokerage business, Woodhull & Claflin, on Wall Street in New York and urged his friends to do business with her.

Even though Woodhull did not meet the basic Constitutional requirements (the fact that she was a woman notwithstanding), the precedent allowing women to vie for the office of the presidency was credibly established when Belva Lockwood ran for President in 1884. Without Woodhull's baggage, her name appeared on the ballot in several States and thus, the confusion over whether Woodhull or Lockwood was the first woman to run for President of the United States.

In any event, regardless which woman was historically construed to be the first female presidential candidate, collectively they established the legal precedent which suggests that even though the Constitution specifically defines the President of the United States as a male, women are now construed to have a legal right to seek the office of President of the United States even though it was the firm intent of the Founding Fathers to limit that high office to men..

In Article II, Section 1, the Constitution appears to establish only three ironclad qualifications for president. The president must (1) be at least 35 years old, (2) have lived in the United States at least 14 years, and (3) be a natural-born citizen. Yet, Article II, Section 1 declares that the President will be a man 16 times. Further, as noted by J.A. Corry, principal of Queen's University in London, and Henry J. Abraham, Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania, in their political science text book, Elements of Democratic Government (©1964; Oxford University Press) that in addition to the "written" qualifications for the office, there are also several "unwritten" qualifications and customary requirements that precedent has added to the qualifications for the office of President of the United States. Corry and Abraham insist these prerequisites must be viewed in the light of the entire composite. Being male is necessarily one of them.

Moreover, the Founding Fathers specifically wrote into the Constitution a male-gendered office called President. Article II, Section 1 begins: "The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. He shall hold his office during the term of four years, and with the Vice President, chosen for the same term, be elected as follows..." You really do not have to read further to realize the role of President of the United States is gender-specific. Note the qualifications for the office of Congressman found in Article I, Section 1: "The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every second year by the people of the several States...No person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained the age of 25 years, and been 7 years a citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen..." There is no gender specification in the description of a Congressman. Nor is there any in the qualifications for Senator found in Article I, Section 2: "The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each State chosen by the legislature thereof...No person shall be a Senator who shall have attained the age of 30 years, and been 9 years a citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen." Only one time, in one sentence, in Article I are the members of the House and/or Senate collectively referred to in male gender, and that is in Section 6, paragraph 2. In that instance, the usage is basically generic since there is no individual gender specific reference made for an individual person. In this single instance, the Constitution is clarifying that Congressmen and Senators may not serve a dual role in the Executive Branch of government.

Four times in Article I, Section 7 the President is referred to specifically as a man. Again, this was not an accident. The President is referred to, by gender, a total of 20 times in the Constitution. Most constitutional scholars agree that the Founding Fathers intended to establish a male gender national leader. In doing so, they explicitly barred women from ever becoming the President of the United States without first enacting a constitutional amendment that would allow them to accept the office if elected (since there appears to be nothing that bars them from seeking the office—only serving it if elected). In his book, "America's Constitution: A Guided Tour," Yale law professor Akhill Reed Amar suggests that the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote, also granted them the implied corresponding right to seek the office of President of the United States. "In effect," he said, "that amendment required that the word 'he' in the original constitutional clauses dealing with the president would henceforth be read to mean 'he' or 'she.'"

Amar is, unfortunately, "reading" words or meanings not in evidence. The 19th Amendment merely grants women the right to vote. Although liberals have mastered the art of creating supra rights in existing case law by implication, there is no implied corresponding right to be construed here—particularly for women seeking the office of President of the United States which, constitutionally, is uniquely a male job. Sexist, isn't it?

Simply stated, the 19th Amendment says: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex. Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation." Granted, starry-eyed liberals will automatically see the expansive nature of the phrase "...shall not be...abridged..." and will expand that phrase sufficiently to drive a Mack truck through it since the entire Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and 1968 were crafted from the "commerce clause" in Article I, Section 8. But the simple truth is that all the 19th Amendment does is provide women with the right to vote in federal, State, county and local elections. While women have never been denied the right to seek public office (even when they could not vote for themselves or for other female candidates for office), there is nothing in the 19th Amendment (or any other amendment for that matter) that neutralizes the gender specific qualities required of those who become the President of the United States.

Without looking too far beyond the tip of our noses, we will find several liberal federal judges—particularly female judges—who would vehemently argue that the 19th Amendment's vote-granting to the "fair sex" tacitly degenderized all masculine references to the office of President. That argument has legal merit only if you can honestly conclude, after reading the entire document, that the Founding Fathers did not intend to create a national leader who was specifically male.

Remember, at that time there were many female monarchs in Europe, so the notion of female heads of state was not alien to their thinking. And, while the door was not closed to women seeking government office, the Founding Fathers visualized the national leader of the United States as a man—and they deliberately penned that perspective into the Constitution. If that hypothesis is correct, then a woman cannot constitutionally serve as President of the United States until a constitutional amendment is ratified to correct the presumption by the Founding Fathers that the President of the United States must be a man.

What does that mean for Sen. Hillary Clinton's aspirations to somehow become the 44th or 45th President of the United States? It means she should be thankful she has a job as the US Senator of the second most liberal State in the Union. Unless, of course, Hillary and the feminists in the House and Senate can join Sen. Orrin Hatch's [R-UT] and become cosponsors of Hatch's latest effort to weaken the Constitution. Hatch has proffered a revolutionary new constitutional amendment that will weaken the requirements needed for a candidate to run for the presidency. The latest Hatch Amendment that will trigger a constitutional amendment resolution if it is successfully attached to any piece of legislation going through Congress, seeks to eliminate the "naturally-born" clause from Article II, Section 1. That would be the perfect opportunity for the feminists to redefine the good ol' boy genderization of the office of President (while only a few people realize that the current wording does constitutionally prevent women from holding the office of President.

It is unclear why Hatch chose this time to proffer his latest amendment since it will likely benefit the Democrats far more than his own party. At this moment, Hatch's resolution would affect two high profile up-and-coming politicians. First is Gov. Jennifer Granholm [D-MI], who is the rising star of the Democratic Party. Second is Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger [R-CA], a moderate Kennedy Republican who is, unfortunately greatly influenced by Hatch's across the aisle buddy, Uncle Teddy Kennedy. But, as I said, the person who would benefit most if an amended version of Hatch's resolution becomes a constitutional amendment will be Sen. Hillary Clinton who would suddenly not have to worry about testosterone court challenges when she announces she is a candidate for the office of President of the United States.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2016election; 25thamendment; 26thamendment; astroturf; drafthillary; election2016; elections; hillary; hillaryclinton; hitlery; nationalvoterid; president; scotus; tinfoiledagain; twentyfifthamendment; twentysixthamendment; veep; vicepresident; voterid
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To: looscnnn
Did you mean suppository?

Wow...that is truly uncanny.

Yes. That is exactly what I meant.

My respects.

81 posted on 06/23/2004 12:04:35 PM PDT by laotzu
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To: tdadams

It gets it out there and noticed. Thats always been what you do when you post something. At least that is what I was taught to do. I don't post that often, but that is what those who taught me, told me to do.

FRegards


82 posted on 06/23/2004 12:05:04 PM PDT by Vets_Husband_and_Wife
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To: ServesURight
I stopped reading when I got to this bit of drivel.

The unflattering argument was raised that aside from the fact that Vanderbilt's mistress was too young to seek the office of the presidency, only men were eligible to run for elective federal office since the Constitution itself barred women from voting and, by extension, from holding office...

Nothing in the US Constitution has ever barred women from voting or holding any elective office. Women voted in some states in the 19th century, and even in the 18th century (New Jersey I think it was). Suffrage, either by age, sex, or race, was at the discretion of the states, not the Federal government. All the 18th amendment (passed in 1920) did was to tell the states they could not forbid the vote to women. A number of states already allowed women to vote by that point. The same is true with the 15th (1868?) which said that the vote could not be denied to blacks. Many states already had allowed blacks to vote by that time.

I sure wish some folks would take the time to actually read the constitution as opposed to just waving it around as some sort of talisman.

83 posted on 06/23/2004 12:05:08 PM PDT by Ditto ( No trees were killed in sending this message, but billions of electrons were inconvenienced.)
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To: cloud8
Who the heck is Jon Christian Ryter?

I'm thinkin' it is a female.

This article is just like something a women would say.(/sarcasm)

84 posted on 06/23/2004 12:07:51 PM PDT by laotzu
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To: Vets_Husband_and_Wife

It's pointless. Bumping a thread puts it back at the top of the subscribed threads, the same place it resides when you first post. Bumping right after you post a thread is completely redundant.


85 posted on 06/23/2004 12:10:54 PM PDT by tdadams (If there were no problems, politicians would have to invent them... wait, they already do.)
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To: dirtboy

Hillary abused the power of the presidency by taking on powers that she was not entitled to. If she was not "co-president" then what was she? First Lady hold no such power.


86 posted on 06/23/2004 12:12:03 PM PDT by weegee (Government does not solve problems; it subsidizes them. ~~Ronald Reagan)
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To: B4Ranch
Didn't you mean udderly?

Well, if the hoof fits.....

87 posted on 06/23/2004 12:21:20 PM PDT by Defiant (Moore-On: That throbbing anticipation felt by a liberal hoping for America's defeat.)
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To: tdadams

You're wrong. I've noticed a bumped thread when I wasn't pinged to it. Then I've "pinged" it to a list of friends if I thought they might be interested.

I guess you're just in a mood to argue with people today. I took the bait. I normally don't bite, and I'm sorry to see I did so in this situation. I have bigger fish to fry, so see ya later.


88 posted on 06/23/2004 12:24:10 PM PDT by Vets_Husband_and_Wife
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To: ServesURight

Yeah, I can see this having a lot of weight when Hillary throws her hat into the ring. I'll toss this in the same pile as the "you are not required to pay income taxes" arguments.


89 posted on 06/23/2004 12:26:17 PM PDT by Junior (FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC)
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To: Vets_Husband_and_Wife

Um, yeah, I'm in a mood to argue. Good conclusion but wrong. I was trying to be helpful. You're welcome.


90 posted on 06/23/2004 12:26:55 PM PDT by tdadams (If there were no problems, politicians would have to invent them... wait, they already do.)
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To: tdadams

But not necessarily useless. I typically ping or bump a thread I post immediately after I post it so that it shows up in My Comments (otherwise, I have to wait until someone else posts to it to see it there).


91 posted on 06/23/2004 12:29:59 PM PDT by Junior (FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC)
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To: ServesURight

We need to forget the gender stuff. Many things in history refer "man" and really include the whole "human race". If we make an issue out of this then why can't hillary (hypothetically speaking) if elected, be exempt from the two term limitation for men?


92 posted on 06/23/2004 12:41:44 PM PDT by ampat
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To: ServesURight

WAIT!!!...you mean Hillary's a WOMAN?






Doogle (grins)


93 posted on 06/23/2004 12:45:00 PM PDT by Doogle (...Who cares if a 500lb laser guided bomb is accurate within 9 feet?)
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To: ServesURight

Once you've gone over the rainbow anything is possible. Or, was that down the rabbit hole (poor Alice - when she was just small)?


94 posted on 06/23/2004 12:53:26 PM PDT by familyofman (and the first animal is jettisoned - legs furiously pumping)
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To: ServesURight
Although Mondale and Ferraro lost in the biggest election upset since 1820 when John Quincy Adams won only one electoral vote in his fight to win the presidency from James Madison,

Someone may have already pointed this out, but the above statement is a gross error. First, it was James Monroe, not James Madison, who won all but one electoral vote in 1820 (Madison had left the presidency after two terms at Monroe's first inauguration in 1817). Second, John Quincy Adams was not running for president that year. One elector from New Hampshire merely cast his presidential ballot for Adams for one or a combination of three reasons--to assure only George Washington would ever receive unanimous election, a genuine dislike of Monroe, or a genuine admiration of Adams.

Okay. I can't comment on the rest of the article till I read it all, and it's a little hard to understand.

95 posted on 06/23/2004 12:54:10 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Kisei' vaMizbeach! (BiYrushalayim HaBenuyah!!))
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To: dirtboy
Where in the heck did that come from? And please tell me where the position of First Lady is mentioned in the Constitution, and how that is Constitutionally-mandated service, above and beyond the absurd notion that someone who served under a president cannot fill a vacancy from that president - review the presidential succession order, which includes cabinet members, and get back to me.

I believe you completely misunderstood the author's point. It has nothing to do with being a First Lady or serving a President in any capicity (other than VP). The point the author is making is that if a woman can't be President, then neither can a woman be VP, since only people qualified to be President can serve as VP.

I find the author's opinion on the whole matter interesting. He may be right or he may be wrong. I'm disappointed in some of my fellow Freepers who have attacked this man so viciously for stating an opinion.

96 posted on 06/23/2004 12:55:07 PM PDT by GLDNGUN (.)
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To: dirtboy

this IS interesting...because of Hilary's involvement with the Health care Task Force in 1994, whether or not she was actually a federal employee or not, wound up being litigated-and as I recall, it was determined that in her capacity as first lady, she was indeed a federal emplyee. As to whether or not this implies presidential appointment per se, I'll leave to Clintonian parsing-but I am sure it does.


97 posted on 06/23/2004 12:58:14 PM PDT by mo
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To: GLDNGUN
I believe you completely misunderstood the author's point. It has nothing to do with being a First Lady or serving a President in any capicity (other than VP). The point the author is making is that if a woman can't be President, then neither can a woman be VP, since only people qualified to be President can serve as VP.

Read this again:

Because she cannot constitutionally fill the vacancy caused by the death, resignation, impeachment and removal of any US president under whom she served.

That has nothing to do with gender, and, if read literally, would also disqualify cabinet secretaries.

I find the author's opinion on the whole matter interesting. He may be right or he may be wrong. I'm disappointed in some of my fellow Freepers who have attacked this man so viciously for stating an opinion.

We have a very low tolerance for stupid, sloppy scholarship here.

98 posted on 06/23/2004 12:59:26 PM PDT by dirtboy (John Kerry - Hillary without the fat ankles and the FBI files...)
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To: mo
this IS interesting...because of Hilary's involvement with the Health care Task Force in 1994, whether or not she was actually a federal employee or not, wound up being litigated-and as I recall, it was determined that in her capacity as first lady, she was indeed a federal emplyee. As to whether or not this implies presidential appointment per se, I'll leave to Clintonian parsing-but I am sure it does.

Once again, whether or not Hillary served Bill Clinton in some official function has no bearing as to whether she would have been eligible to succeed him. Here is the relevant section from the 22nd Amendment:

and the Congress may by law provide for the case wherein neither a President elect nor a Vice President elect shall have qualified, declaring who shall then act as President, or the manner in which one who is to act shall be selected, and such person shall act accordingly until a President or Vice President shall have qualified.

And here is the succession for president, as passed by Congress and signed into law by Truman in 1947:

The cabinet members are ordered in the line of succession according to the date their offices were established.

The Vice President Richard Cheney
Speaker of the House John Dennis Hastert
President pro tempore of the Senate1 Ted Stevens
Secretary of State Colin Powell
Secretary of the Treasury John Snow
Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
Attorney General John Ashcroft
Secretary of the Interior Gale A. Norton
Secretary of Agriculture Ann M. Veneman
Secretary of Commerce Donald Evans
Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao
Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy G. Thompson
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Alphonso Jackson
Secretary of Transportation Norman Yoshio Mineta
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham
Secretary of Education Roderick Paige
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony J. Principi
Secretary of Homeland Security2 Tom Ridge

-------------

So there is no Constitutional prohibition of someone serving under a president from succeeding him.

99 posted on 06/23/2004 1:08:46 PM PDT by dirtboy (John Kerry - Hillary without the fat ankles and the FBI files...)
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To: Doctor Stochastic

You forgot
is/ea/id
ho/he/to
hän
:-)


100 posted on 06/23/2004 1:26:18 PM PDT by cloud8
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