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RLC amendment recommendations stress individual liberty, property rights

At their July 25 meeting, the executive committee of the RLC of Florida made two official recommendations regarding Florida referenda that reiterate the group's commitment to free markets, individual liberty and private property. The RLC officially recommended voters at large vote YES on Amendment 9 and NO on Amendment 4 in November.

Amendment 9, as known as the Healthcare Freedom Act, states that any law or rule shall not compel, directly or indirectly, any individual to participate in any health care system against their will. The Act specifies that individuals cannot be fined, penalized or imprisoned for not participating in a mandated health insurance program such as Obamacare. If approved by Floridians in November, Health Care Freedom will become a provision of the Florida Constitution.

That Amendment 9 is on the ballot at all is partly due to efforts of RLCers who lobbied for the bill and traveled to the state capitol and went door to door speaking to legislators on behalf of the measure. Political consultant John Hallman said the measure was on the edge of being dismissed without even a committee vote when an outpouring of support surrounding the crucial vote in March led to a 10-3 committee vote to send the bill to the floor of the Senate and eventually passage in both houses.

RLC RECOMMENDS:

YES on AMENDMENT 9

NO on AMENDMENT 4 

In this effort, the RLCFL worked closely with Sen. Cary Baker and Rep. Scott Plakon, the two chief sponsors of the amendment.

Unfortunately, even though the Amendment was approved by the legislature, lawsuits have been launched to keep the Healthcare Freedom Act off the ballot. However, the RLC strongly believes the decision should be made by citizens and not by the court.

The RLC executive committee also came out against Amendment 4, the so-called Hometown Democracy act, which would require public referenda on a wide range of land use decisions.

Leonard Gilroy, a senior policy analyst at the libertarian Reason Foundation, put it like this in a James Madison Institute Point of View: "Throwing landowners' ability to develop their property to the whims of public opinion shaped by costly public relations campaigns embraces the ultimate tyranny of the majority over individual property rights."

For the record, the RLC is dissatisfied with the status quo where the decision-making responsibility is largely shared by elected officials and urban planners. Citizen input comes through their participation in planning boards and there is recourse to appeals, but nonetheless property rights are routinely violated in the state of Florida.

However, Amendment 4 is a move in the wrong direction, adding an additional layer of bureaucracy and expense in exercising one's property rights. In practice, where Amendment 4 style laws exist, the process is mired in litigation.

The RLCFL played a significant role in 2005 in the successful statewide referendum to protect property owners from the use of eminent domain for private purposes. See also here and here for more details of RLC efforts on the successful Kelo remedy amendment.

At the Sunday night meeting, the board also considered several endorsements of candidates and announcements of new endorsements can be expected in the coming weeks.

 

 

RLCers to meet at Ron Paul's Florida Liberty Summit

The RLC of Florida will have an outreach table, make a short presentation about the RLC and hold an informal RLC update and discussion get-together in conjunction with the Campaign for Liberty's Florida Liberty Summit, Aug. 13-15 at the Rosen Centre in Orlando.

We'll be in good company. Scheduled speakers include Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), historians Tom Woods and Tom DiLorenzo, former CIA officer Philip Giraldi and Florida legislators Rep. Scott Plakon and Sen. Cary Baker among many others.

The informal RLC statewide meeting will be held at 12:30-1:30 Saturday at the RLC outreach booth at the Summit. Also, RLCers and friends who are not attending the Saturday night banquet are welcome to join us for dinner offsite, but nearby! Pick up the details at the RLC booth.

See you there!

Campaign for Liberty is a non-partisan activist organization launched by Ron Paul, the former honorary national chair of the RLC. C4L's current state chair is RLCer Mark Cross.

More details to come, but register today. This is big event for RLC and the broader liberty movement in Florida. See you there!

 

Cape Coral GOP: What is a libertarian Republican?

Who are these libertarian Republicans? What do they believe in? Where did they come from? That's what we want to know.

Those were the questions posed to RLCer Philip Blumel, who was invited by the Cape Coral Republican Club -- the biggest in Republican-dominated Lee County -- to speak at their April meeting.  The Cape Coral Republicans have watched as an RLC group was formed locally and much of the leadership of the Southwest Florida Young Republicans have allied with the emergent libertarian Republican movement. The perception is that libertarians sparked the Tea Party movement and that, among the young, the best and brightest are attracted to this 'new' cause.

In answering their queries, Blumel started with the latest polling on the number of libertarians among the electorate, their voting patterns and demographics. He moved on to define the term and then trace the history of these 'new' libertarian ideas from the Classical Liberal era that grew out of the 18th century Enlightenment until its rebirth as 'libertarianism' in the 20th. Then he compared the creed with conservatism and discussed specific issues in a wide ranging question-and-answer session.

The meeting was interactive and friendly and attended by about 60. Several libertarian-leaning Young Republicans and RLCers also attended the meeting, such as Vince Perfetto Jr., Aaron O'Brien and Mercedes Price-Harry, which helped put a face to the movement. Several officeholders and candidates attended, including RLC-friendly county commission candidate Dick Ripp (shown talking to Blumel, below).

This was only the latest in a series of presentations by libertarian Republicans in Southwest Florida. Lawrence Reed, president of the Foundation of Economic Education, spoke at the Cape Coral GOP club and Bob Levy, chairman of the Cato Institute, spoke in Estero this year. With the assistance of the campus-bound Eagles for Liberty, FEE president Lawrence Reed and Army policeman Kyle Vogt and others have brought the freedom message to Florida Gulf Coast University.

 

LOOKING BACK: RLCers at SLRC 2004 in Miami

There is a lot of excitement this weekend, as libertarian Republicans from around the country join the party's old guard in New Orleans for the second largest national Republican gathering after the national convention, the Southern Republican Leadership Conference.

Not only are Republicans energized by their prospects in November against the Democrats, but libertarians are energized about their ascendant status within the GOP.

Of course, seeds for this revolution were planted and nourished over the years by the RLC, Rep. Ron Paul and others. Back in 2004, the SRLC was held in Miami and the RLC of Florida was there.

That year, the RLC held a outreach table complete with the World's Smallest Political Quiz and two-dimensional Nolan Chart to explain the rudiments of libertarianism to Republican activists and to meet prospective RLCers. RLC literature featured Rep. Ron Paul, once a chair of the organization, advocating his Congressional races as opposed to his later presidential one.

In attendence were Ed Rahn, Jeff Palmer, Jackie Fernandez, Tom Walls, Philip Blumel, Frank Cuzzocrea Jr., Sean Landon and others. The relationships growing from this event formed the backbone of the resurgent statewide RLC that reappeared as an important grass roots force that year.

The reaction to explicit libertarians at this event was cordial and enthusiastic in some cases and unwelcome in others. Halfway through the explosion of spending and new and expanded government programs that marked the George W. Bush years, the run-of-the-mill GOP activist hardly questioned big government neoconservativism. How things have changed in a few short years!

Thanks to all the activists who were in the field laying the groundwork for the internal revolution finally recognized in the wake of the 2006-08 electoral defeats.

 

2010 LIBERTY DAYS: RLCers press for healthcare freedom in Tallahassee

 

About 35 RLCers from around the state attended this week the 2010 Liberty Days at the Capitol, the RLC's annual grassroots lobbying trek to Tallahassee, in the midst of the national battle against ObamaCare.

Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp addresses RLCers

The timing was perfect. The RLC's first event was a hearing before the House Healthcare Regulation Policy Committee, in which Rep. Scott Plakon - sponsor of the Healthcare Freedom Act - made his case for protecting Floridians from the individual mandates included in the national bill. His bill (HJR 37) to do that passed the committee 10-3 amid cheers from the RLCers present.

 

Sen. Cary Baker with RLCer Victor Wilhelm; John Hallman (center) strategizes with RLCers

"It is our duty to step up and reassert the rights of Floridians, in this case protecting our citizen's rights and freedoms to make appropriate decisions as it relates to their own health care," said Plakon.

As noted by Richard Swier at redcounty.com, Rep. Plakon added historical context by pointing out that in 1787, Dr. Benjamin Rush, the first Surgeon General of the Continental Army, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, worked diligently to have the protection of "medical freedom" as a key addition to the U.S. Constitution. Dr. Rush warned that medicine could become "an undercover dictatorship and force people who wish doctors and treatment of their own choice to submit to only what the dictating outfit offers."

Rep. Scott Plakon and Sen. Cary Baker discuss the future of the Healthcare Freedom Act with RLCers after the successful House committee vote

After the committee hearing, RLCers met with Rep. Plakon and the Senate sponsor of the bill (SJR 72), Sen. Cary Baker, for some celebration and planning our next steps. After the meeting, RLCer and political consultant John Hallman led RLCers went from office to office pressing for support of the Healthcare Freedom Act, two other 10th Amendment bills, TABOR and protection of Florida's 8-year legislative term limits law.

In the late afternoon, Florida RLC chair Will Pitts and others met with new Republican Party of Florida chair, Sen. John Thrasher, to mend the rift between the RPOF and the RLC created by the disgraced former GOP chair Jim Greer. After a successful day for both our bills and our organization, RLCers spent the evening eating and drinking in downtown restaurants and bars, meeting and getting caught up with each other.

Florida RLC Chair Will Pitts introduces the RLC at a legislator's office

The next day, RLCers met with more legislators and aides, including Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp who met with both the RLCers as a group and privately with RLCFL Chair Will Pitts.

Several RLCers attended the press conference of Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum who announced his intention to be one of the nine or so state attorney generals to sue the federal government as soon as the ObamaCare bill was signed by the president.

"There are two basic principles here," McCollum said. "Number one that Congress has exceeded its powers in terms of its requiring the individual mandate that anybody has to buy a health care policy or suffer a penalty of some sort, a fine or a tax. And number two that it violates the 10th Amendment rights of the states in that it goes far beyond an unfunded mandate and literally would cost the State of Florida alone billions of dollars."

This is the primary message the RLC sought to voice in Tallahassee this year and it was gratifying to hear many of our Republican leaders join in the chorus.

(RLCers are encouraged to forward pictures from the event to accompany this article. Thanks!)

 
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