Sidelined Legislators Head to Court to Stop Obama's Lawlessness

President Obama has effectively cast the Congress aside as he pursues his agenda to fundamentally transform America. He has rewritten much of his Affordable Care Act, a law passed despite the fact that it has never enjoyed majority support, to move its mandate deadlines around the inconvenience of elections, and to keep moving the goal posts on what constitutes the program’s success. The law as written and signed does not provide the power for these broad changes. At the same time, he is using the regulatory state — chiefly the Environmental Protection Agency — to impose by executive action a far-left economic agenda he could not get through Congress even when Democrats controlled both houses. He has headed off challenges to the EPA’s actions by packing the Washington DC Circuit Court, which is where federal regulations are most often challenged in court, by packing it with his allies. And at the same time, the Obama NSA has ramped up its surveillance of American citizens to unprecedented new levels, while lying directly to Congress about its actions, during a time that President Obama himself claims that the chief terrorist threat, al Qaeda, is “on the run.” If al Qaeda is really on the run, then what’s the purpose of the government’s increase in surveillance?

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His IRS became a political weapon during his re-election effort, IRS officials involved lied about it, and despite claiming to be outraged by it he has held no one accountable — because by repeatedly declaring his opponents “terrorists” and the like, he and his administration set the scheme in motion. Obama also joked about unleashing the IRS to audit his opponents in 2009, and lo and behold, the audits have come.

With Congress bypassed and cornered nearly to checkmate, there aren’t many avenues left to challenge the administration. One avenue is the courts, so that is where a pair of Republican senators are taking their cases.

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) writes that he is taking the Obama administration to court over its Obamacare exemptions.

On Monday, Jan. 6, I am filing suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin to make Congress live by the letter of the health-care law it imposed on the rest of America. By arranging for me and other members of Congress and their staffs to receive benefits intentionally ruled out by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the administration has exceeded its legal authority.

The president and his congressional supporters have also broken their promise to the American people that ObamaCare was going to be so good that they would participate in it just like everyone else. In truth, many members of Congress feel entitled to an exemption from the harsh realities of the law they helped jam down Americans’ throats in 2010. Unlike millions of their countrymen who have lost coverage and must now purchase insurance through an exchange, members and their staffs will receive an employer contribution to help pay for their new plans.

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Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) is launching a class-action lawsuit to halt the NSA’s spying on American citizens.

Paul confirmed to [Fox News Channel’s Eric] Bolling that former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli will be leading his legal team’s efforts against President Obama. “Yeah, Ken Cuccinelli is the former attorney general of Virginia,” Paul answered when Bolling asked if Cuccinelli was going to be on the team. “He was also the first attorney general to file a lawsuit against Obamacare. And he’s joined our legal team. He has constitutional expertise. We’re hoping with his help we can get a hearing in court and so that we can get this class action lawsuit, I think the first of its kind, all the way to the Supreme Court.”

Paul said the goal of the lawsuit is to force the Obama administration to follow the constitution, specifically the Fourth Amendment. “We want them to protect the Fourth Amendment,” Paul said. “We want them to protect the right to privacy. We want them to understand that we’re not willing to trade our liberty for security. We think we can have security and we can defend against terrorism but that doesn’t mean every individual American has to give up their privacy. We think we can have both. But we are very upset that this president doesn’t seem to be too concerned with our right to privacy.”

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Anyone can join Paul’s lawsuit — which he says impacts every cell phone owner in the United States, since the NSA has been collecting cell phone metadata — here.

These lawsuits are necessary because Barack Obama fundamentally opposes the United States Constitution as written. He wishes for the Constitution to be a social justice charter empowering the federal government to redistribute wealth, and for a Constitution that does not limit the federal government at all. The lawsuits point toward a serious constitutional crisis occurring in this president’s final two years in office.

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