Cronkite Header

Cronkite News has moved to a new home at cronkitenews.azpbs.org. Use this site to search archives from 2011 to May 2015. You can search the new site for current stories.

Horne joins other GOP attorneys general blasting federal ‘overreach’

Email this story
Print this story

WASHINGTON – Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne joined other attorneys general Monday to criticize the Obama administration’s “unprecedented” overreach of federal authority that they said have led to a torrent of lawsuits over immigration, voting rights, health care and more.

Horne and eight others representing the Republican Attorneys General Association said they are being forced to engage in numerous lawsuits with the federal government because of the administration’s disregard for states’ rights.

“We all have a large number of lawsuits against the federal government . . . dealing not with policy disagreements but what we think are unconstitutional actions by the federal government,” Horne said.

A request for comment from the Justice Department was not returned. But the White House called claims of federal overreach unsubstantiated.

“President Obama approved fewer regulations in the first three years of his presidency than George W. Bush did in his,” said White House spokesman Eric Shultz in a prepared statement.

“But there is no question that past regulations are outdated, unnecessary, or too costly,” Schultz said. “That is why the president ordered every federal agency to eliminate rules that don’t make sense.”

As a result, he said, the administration has “already identified 500 changes, just a fraction of which will save business and citizens more than $10 billion over the next five years.”

But the Republican attorneys general were focused less on regulatory burden and more on what they called the administration’s “violations of the law,” including the federal health-care overhaul that more than half the states are challenging.

Horne said Arizona is currently tangled with the federal government in eight cases, including challenges to SB 1070, the state’s omnibus immigration law that will be heard by the Supreme Court in April.

He specifically discussed two lawsuits in Arizona: One concerns a law that would increase voter identification requirements and another deals with a law to let workers cast votes on union matters by secret ballot. The federal government has challenged both.

“Not only are they unwilling to properly do their job on the border – and they sue us when we try to help at the border – but now they want illegal aliens to vote and they’re arguing in the court of appeals for that purpose,” Horne said of the voting ID law.

“That’s really outside our Constitution to have people who are not citizens voting,” he said.

He said he believes Arizona is targeted by the Obama administration because the state is in 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, what Horne called the “most liberal circuit” in the country.

Several attorneys general on the panel said Obama’s federal overreach was the worst they had witnessed in their lifetimes. South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson took it a step further, calling Obama’s overreach “the worst in the history of this country.”

“You throw a frog in hot water, it’ll jump out. If you put a frog into lukewarm water and slowly turn up the heat, that frog will boil to death,” Wilson said.

“You’re seeing a slow boil, an erosion of state sovereignty and individual liberties by this administration,” he said.