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The Senator Deception: How the 17th Amendment Stripped the States of Their Voice

by Brian Churchill
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Current price ₹1,967.00
Original price ₹2,243.00
Original price ₹2,243.00
Original price ₹2,243.00
(-12%)
₹1,967.00
Current price ₹1,967.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798197332912
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 288
  • Original Price: GBP 17.25
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 386 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Civil Rights

In 1913, the United States Senate changed forever. Most Americans were told it was progress.

The Senate was not designed as a democratic institution. That was intentional. Under Article I, Section 3 of the original Constitution, senators were chosen by state legislatures - not by popular vote - because the founders understood that the states needed a formal, structural voice inside the federal government they had agreed to empower. James Madison explained this with precision in Federalist No. 62. The Senate was the states' institution. It was the constitutional mechanism through which sovereign state governments retained a direct, binding check on every federal law, every federal appointment, and every treaty. Without it, the states had no formal protection against the federal overreach the founders specifically designed the Senate to prevent.

The 17th Amendment eliminated that protection in April 1913. Two months earlier, the 16th Amendment had handed Congress unchecked taxing power. Nine months later, the Federal Reserve Act restructured the nation's monetary system. Three of the most consequential structural changes in American history - to the taxing power, the Senate's accountability structure, and the monetary system - were accomplished in a single twelve-month window. That coincidence has never been seriously examined in the standard civic account of the progressive era.

What replaced the state-accountable Senate was a nationally-accountable one - a chamber whose members answer to party organizations, donor networks, and popular electorates rather than to the state governments whose sovereignty the original Senate was built to protect. The result was predictable and has been observable for more than a century: the growth of the unfunded mandate machine, the displacement of state regulatory authority by federal administrative requirements, the transformation of state governments from sovereign entities into federal administrative agents, and the systematic expansion of federal power that the founders' constitutional design had specifically sought to prevent.

This book does not argue for repeal of the 17th Amendment. It does something the progressive narrative has never done: it provides the full constitutional account. What the Senate was. What it was designed to do. What Madison's own words said about why state legislative appointment was constitutionally necessary. What was lost when the amendment passed. And why, more than a century later, most Americans still cannot answer those four questions.

The information has always been available. It has never been taught. That ends here.

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