| Treating Honduras Like a Colony | | Print | |
| Written by Bruce Walker | ||||||||||||
| Friday, 06 November 2009 22:00 | ||||||||||||
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The constitutonal crisis began last summer when President Zelaya tried to extend his term of office without pursuing the proper process for amending the Honduran Constitution, which explicitly states that no one can run for President if he has already served as President. Amending the Honduran Constitution requires a two-thirds majority vote of Congress, but instead of his pursuing this constitutional route, Zelaya tried to hold a popular referendum to amend the Constitution. The Obama Administration prefers to call what happened next a "coup." The national legislature of Honduras, which has five different political parties, none of which has a majority, moved to prevent Zelaya from violating the Constitution he had sworn to uphold. The Honduran Supreme Court found Zelaya had acted illegally, that he was in contempt of court, and that he was violating the Honduran Constitution. Of course, a constitutional limitation on how long a President may serve is not unique to Honduras. For example, the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states: "No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice." What would happen if President Clinton had tried to run for a third term in 2000, and had called for a preliminary "election" to determine that he had the right to do so? Would the European Union or the United Nations have a right to try to work out a "compromise" between Clinton and those parts of our government which flatly denied his right to either call a constitutional election or to run for a third term while the 22nd Amendment was still part of the U.S. Constitution?
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Florida Warren
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Excellent analysis! As one who has researched and written much about the Honduran situation, I compliment you on your fine presentation of the facts. |
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Still Free
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I Agree 100% As Florida Warren said, "Excellent analysis!" Thank you, Mr. Walker, for the concise and logical explanation, all expressed in such clear terms. |
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American Citizen
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Yes..... ...excellent article. Genuinely excellent. I only wish it had mentioned something of the egregious efforts by top-ranking Democrats to actually pressure the Library of Congress into altering the findings of their investigation into the Honduran situation. Clearly they fear Americans rising up to remove their own "dear leader" under similar circumstances, seeing as how the administration is so hell-bent on getting its way regardless of such minor inconveniences as the Constitution of the United States, or, say, the truth. They are all intensely serious control freaks. If you are not one of them, everything about you needs immediate "controlling." |
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The Associated Press reported on November 6 that a deal to end the constitutional crisis in Honduras and form a unity govenment has fallen apart. Ousted President Manuel Zelaya and current leader Roberto Micheletti were pressured into accepting the deal by the United States.
