From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ron Paul, a Republican United States Congressman from
Lake
Jackson, Texas, has sponsored many bills in the United States
House of Representatives, such as those that abolish the income tax[1]
or the Federal Reserve. While Paul's press
secretary Jeff Deist has noted, "We don't kid ourselves about the
chance of passage of a lot of these bills," some, like his
groundbreaking term limits legislation, are recognized as
"ahead of their time".[2]
Except where indicated, all named bills below were originally
authored and sponsored by Paul.
Foreign
policy
Nonintervention
- Kosovo, 1999-2000: Prohibits the Department of Defense from
using troops in Kosovo unless
specifically authorized by law.[2]
- Constitutional War Powers Resolution of 2001. H.J.Res. 27,
2001-03-06. Repeals the 1973 War Powers Resolution entirely,
prohibiting presidents from initiating a war without a formal declaration of war by Congress.[3]
- Iraq
Resolution declaration of war. Motion in re
H.J.Res. 114,
2002-10-02. In order to prevent Congress from yielding its
Constitutional authority to declare war to the executive branch,
which does not Constitutionally hold that power, gives Congress the
opportunity to declare war on Iraq, rather than merely
"authorizing" the president to deploy forces without a declaration
of war.[4] Paul
said that he would not vote for his own motion, but that if his
fellow members of Congress wished to go to war in Iraq, they should
follow the Constitution and declare war.
- Iran and Syria: H.Con.Res. 43,
2007-01-23. Expressing the sense of Congress that the President
should implement Recommendation 9 of the Iraq Study Group
Report. Urges the President to implement Recommendation 9 of
the Iraq Study Group Report, recommending direct engagement with Iran and Syria toward constructive results.
- Sunset of Public Law 107-243 Act of 2007. H.R. 2605,
2007-06-07. Establishes a sunset clause for the
Authorization for Use of Military Force Against
Iraq Resolution of 2002. As one of six Republicans to vote
against the Iraq
Resolution (which authorized military force for stated purposes
without declaring war), Paul also inspired the founding of a group
called the National Peace Lobby Project to promote a resolution he
and Oregon representative Peter DeFazio sponsored to repeal the war
authorization in February 2003. His speech, 35 "Questions That
Won't Be Asked About Iraq",[5] was
translated and published in German, French, Russian, Italian, and
Swiss periodicals before the Iraq War began.[6]
- Constitutional War Powers Amendments of 2007. H.J.Res. 53,
2007-09-25 (cosponsor). Replaces the 1973 War
Powers Resolution with law ensuring the "collective judgment of
both the Congress and the President" in use of war powers.
International
organizations
Borders
and immigration
- Terror Immigration Elimination Act of 2007. H.R. 3217,
2007-07-27, originally H.R. 488,
2003-01-29. Limits the issuance of student and
diversity immigrant visas in relation to Saudi Arabia,
countries that support terrorism, and countries not cooperating
fully with United States antiterrorism efforts.
- Birthright citizenship: H.J.Res. 46,
2007-06-13, originally H.J.Res. 46,
2005-04-28. Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the
United States to deny United States citizenship to individuals born
in the United States to parents who are neither United States
citizens nor persons who owe permanent allegiance to the United
States. Clarifies the Fourteenth Amendment in accord with
Paul's opposition to birthright
citizenship.
- Trans-Texas Corridor: H.R. 5191,
2008-01-29. To prohibit the use of Federal funds to carry out the
highway project known as the "Trans-Texas Corridor".
Terrorism
- Police Security Protection Act. H.R. 3304,
2007-08-01, originally H.R. 1410, 1997-04-23
(Law Officer's Armor Vest Tax Credit Act of 1997). Creates tax
credit for law enforcement officers who purchase armor vests.
- Anti-Terrorism Act of 2007. H.R. 3305,
2007-08-01, originally H.R. 2896,
2001-09-14. Proposed immediately after the September
11, 2001, attacks, permits pilots and navigators of aircraft,
and law enforcement personnel detailed to aircraft, to carry
firearms.
- Marque and Reprisal Act of 2007. H.R. 3216,
2007-07-27. To authorize the President to issue letters of marque
and reprisal with respect to certain acts of air piracy upon
the United States on September 11, 2001, and other similar acts of
war planned for the future.
Economy
Taxes
- Tax Free Tips Act of 2009. H.R. 779, 2009-01-28,
originally H.R. 4408,
1998-08-05. Provides that tips
shall not be subject to income or employment taxes.
- Public Safety Tax Cut Act. H.R. 3303,
2007-08-01, originally H.R. 3124,
1999-10-21. Creates tax credit for police officers and
professional firefighters, and makes public safety volunteer benefits
nontaxable.
- Cost of Government Awareness Act of 2007. H.R. 3601,
2007-09-19, originally H.R. 4855,
2000-07-13. Eliminates employer withholding tax and replaces it with
monthly installment payment of income tax by employees, finding
that withholding taxes are inherently deceptive and unfair and that
they "hide the true cost of government from taxpayers, making tax
increases more feasible".
- Taxpayers' Freedom of Conscience Act of 2009. H.R. 1233,
2009-02-26, originally H.R. 1548,
2003-04-01. To prohibit any Federal official from expending any
Federal funds for any population control or population planning
program or any family planning activity.
- Property tax: H.R. 4293,
2007-12-05, originally H.R. 5860,
2006-07-20. Creates income tax deduction for real property taxes.
- Abolition of income tax: H.J.Res. 23,
2007-02-07. Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the
United States relative to abolishing personal income, estate, and
gift taxes and prohibiting the United States Government from
engaging in business in competition with its citizens. Repeals
the Sixteenth Amendment, income tax,
estate tax, and gift tax, and limits the government only to
Constitutionally authorized enterprises. Paul had proposed similar
legislation in 1999-2000 and in 2001.[2]
- Lutetium oxide: H.R. 962, 2009-02-10,
originally H.R. 3731,
2007-10-02. To suspend temporarily the duty on lutetium oxide, an ingredient in laser crystals.
- Tax Relief for Transportation Workers Act. H.R. 1097,
2009-02-13, originally H.R. 5991,
2008-05-07. To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide
tax relief for obtaining transportation worker identification
credentials.
Inflation
- Affordable Gas Price Act. H.R. 2415,
2007-05-21, originally H.R. 4004,
2005-10-06. To reduce the price of gasoline by allowing for offshore
drilling, eliminating Federal obstacles to constructing refineries
and providing incentives for investment in refineries, suspending
Federal fuel taxes when gasoline prices reach a benchmark amount,
and promoting free trade.
- Make No Cents Until It Makes Sense Act. H.R. 4127,
2007-11-08. To amend title 31, United States Code, to prohibit the
further minting of 1-cent coins until the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System certify in writing that there is not a surplus of 1-cent
coins already available for use in transactions, and for other
purposes. The U.S. Mint currently spends $.014, which is
more than the face value, for each copper-clad zinc U.S. cent it produces.[7] Paul
joked, "We can't even afford a zinc standard anymore."[8]
Sound money/Federal
Reserve
- Coinage Act of 1983. Called for new legal-tender gold
and silver coins. Ahead of its time, this Act anticipated the
successful Gold Bullion Coin Act of
1985, which led to the minting of American
Gold Eagles.[8]
- Gold standard, 1983: Attempted to reinstate the gold standard.[8]
- Coinage legislation, 1984: Sought to require Congressional
approval of any new coinage and paper money designs, and formal
retention of all test notes from the Bureau of Engraving and
Printing.[8]
- Federal Reserve Board Abolition Act. H.R. 833, 2009-02-03,
originally H.R. 1148,
1999-03-17. Abolishes the Federal Reserve
Board and its banks and repeals the Federal
Reserve Act.
- Honest Money Act. H.R. 2756,
2007-06-15, originally H.R. 2779,
2003-07-17. Repeals 31 U.S.C. 5103, the legal tender law that
currently mandates acceptance of Federal Reserve
notes as legal tender, in accord with hard money policy.
- Sunshine in Monetary Policy Act. H.R. 2754,
2007-06-15, originally H.R. 4892,
2006-03-07. Requires the Federal Reserve
Board to continue to publish the M3 monetary aggregate on a weekly basis.
The Federal Reserve ceased publishing M3 statistics as of March 23,
2006, explaining that it costs a lot to collect the data but does
not provide significantly useful information.[9]
- Free Competition in Currency Act of 2007. H.R. 4683,
2007-12-13. Strikes sections 486 and 489 of title 18, United
States Code, due to "prosecutorial abuse".[10] The
Code sections effectively restrict private minting, and were cited
by the FBI as
justification for its November 2007 raid of Liberty Services,
and its seizure of property allegedly including nearly two tons of
precious metals and copper — much of which had been independently
minted by Liberty Services with Paul's image.[11] Paul
commented, "If we don't do something about the dollar, the market
will. I would like to legalize competition in currency."[8]
- Tax-Free Gold Act of 2008. H.R. 5427,
2008-02-13. To provide that no tax or fee may be imposed on certain
coins and bullion. Prohibits taxation on gold, silver,
platinum, palladium, or rhodium bullion and
transactions, and state taxation on gold and silver legal tender
currencies and instruments in interstate or foreign commerce.
- Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009.
H.R. 1207,
2009-02-26. To reform the manner in which the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System is audited by the Comptroller
General of the United States and the manner in which such
audits are reported. Ensures the audit results are available
to Congress,[12]
and includes the Fed's "discount window", its funding facilities,
its open market operations, and its agreements with foreign
bankers.[13]
Proponents state that the Fed has never been audited by Congress
since the Fed's creation in 1913.[14][15] The
Federal Reserve states that "the financial statements of the
Federal Reserve Banks and the Board of Governors are audited
annually by an independent outside auditor."[16] Paul
says that the present audit process exempts the Fed's "most crucial
activities".[17]
Significant advocacy for the Transparency Act has ensued. At a
rally in Bloomington, Indiana, outside the
office of Baron Hill
(D-IN), a Young Americans for Liberty
petition encouraging Hill to vote in favor of the bill circulated
among a crowd of 200; Hill did not comment to YAL, according to
member Meredith Milton.[18] The
advocacy group Campaign for Liberty (CFL)
encourages members to petition representatives to cosponsor the
Transparency Act,[19]
sponsoring hundreds of pro-bill rallies in cities like Boone,
North Carolina;[20] Peoria, Illinois;[21] Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;[22] and
(CFL regional conference) St. Louis, Missouri.[23]
Glenn Beck of Fox News
mentioned the Transparency Act while discussing ways for the
average person to remind Congress, "Hey, you work for me".[24]
During Beck's April 15 show from his rally at the Alamo in San Antonio, Pat Gray interviewed a local
supporter of the Transparency Act, drawing cheers from the
crowd.[25] A
blogger on The Motley Fool website called the bill "the
first attempt at a true audit of the Federal Reserve since its
inception in 1913" and affirmed Paul's Congressionally published
column describing his legislation.[26][27]
- Federal Reserve Sunshine Act of 2009. H.R. 1348,
2009-03-05. Requires the Federal Reserve to publish
information on financial assistance provided to various entities
during the bailout of 2008; creates a website listing all banks
that have borrowed from the Fed since March 24, 2008, and the
amount, terms, and "specific rationale" of the loans. U.S.
Senate sponsor Bernie Sanders (I-VT) commented, "I have a hard time
understanding how you have put $2.2 trillion at risk without making
those names available." Fed chair Ben Bernanke had told Sanders that
publishing the names would make the banks feel stigmatized and
potentially reluctant to borrow further.[12]
Social
Security
- Social Security earnings limit repeal (cosponsor): Repealed the
earnings limitation on Social Security.
Seniors now continue working after retirement without being
penalized.
- Social Security Beneficiary Tax Reduction Act. H.R. 161, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 2723,
1997-10-23. Repeals the 1993 increase in taxes on Social
Security benefits.
- Social Security Preservation Act of 2009. H.R. 219, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 219, 1999-01-06,
cosponsored since H.R. 857,
1997-02-27. Invests the Social Security surplus "trust funds"
in marketable interest-bearing obligations and certificates of deposit, essentially
insuring the integrity of the surplus.[2]
- Senior Citizens Tax Elimination Act. H.R. 162, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 4790,
2002-05-22, cosponsored since H.R. 761,
1999-02-12. Makes Social Security and Railroad Retirement Board
payments nontaxable.
- Social Security for Americans Only Act of 2009. H.R. 160, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 489,
2003-01-29. Limits Social Security benefits to U.S. citizens
and nationals.
Constitutional rights
Freedom of
religion
- Religious Freedom Amendment. H.J.Res. 78,
1997-05-08 (cosponsor). Clarifies the "right to acknowledge
God according to the dictates of conscience" to include the right
of prayer in public schools and other public property, and to
prohibit state establishment
of religion or requirements to participate in prayer.
- Hostettler amendment (Ten Commandments display): H.Amdt. 278,
2005-06-15 (voted in favor), amending H.R. 2862,
2005-06-10. Defunds the southern Indiana U.S. District
Court judgment Russelburg v. Gibson County, which had
directed the removal of a Ten Commandments display on the county
courthouse lawn.[28] The
district judge later reversed himself, holding that the Indiana
display met the Supreme Court's test described in Van Orden v.
Perry, handed down two weeks after the Hostettler
amendment.[29]
- See We
the People Act.
Freedom
of association
- National ID (amendment): Prohibited funding for national identification
numbers.[2]
- Identity Theft Prevention Act of 2009. H.R. 220, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 220, 1999-01-06
(Freedom and Privacy Restoration Act). Protects Social Security number
confidentiality, prohibits uniform national identifying numbers,
and prohibits imposition of federal identification standards.
- TV Consumer Freedom Act. H.R. 3602,
2007-09-19, originally H.R. 1078,
1999-03-11. Requires consent for signal retransmission,
eliminates must-carry requirements, terminates FCC mandates for television
features and functions, and clarifies retransmission rights of
satellite carriers.
- Freedom to Bank Act. H.R. 1419,
2009-03-10, originally H.R. 6297,
2006-09-29. Ends laws and regulations which deny decision-making
opportunities and communication control to bank account
holders. States in its long title that such laws "treat the
American people like children".
Right to keep and bear
arms
Habeas
corpus
Limited
government
- Term limits, 1970s: Paul was the first member of Congress to
propose term limits
legislation in the House,[30]
one of several bills considered "ahead of their time" by Texas
Monthly magazine.[2]
- Market Process Restoration Act of 1999. H.R. 1789,
1999-05-13. Repeals United States antitrust law
(which limits cartels and monopolies), with intent to restore market
economy benefits.
- To repeal the Military Selective Service Act. H.R. 424, 2007-01-11,
originally H.R. 1597,
2001-04-26, cosponsored since H.R. 2421,
1997-09-05. Abolishes the Selective Service
System, prohibits reestablishment of the draft, and forbids
denial of rights due to failure to register.
- Eminent domain: Prevented the Department of Housing and Urban Development
from seizing a church in New York through eminent domain.[2]
- International Criminal Court (ICC): Barred ICC jurisdiction over the
U.S. military (2002 amendment).[31]
- Global tax: Barred American participation in any U.N. "global tax" (2005
amendment).[31]
- Surveillance: Barred surveillance on peaceful First Amendment
activities by citizens (2006 amendment).[31]
Individual privacy may be an area of Paul's greatest influence, and
he has long worked tirelessly against forms of what he considers to
be federal snooping.[2]
- Sunlight Rule. H.Res. 216,
2009-03-05, originally H.Res. 709,
2006-03-02. Amending the Rules of the House of Representatives to
ensure that Members have a reasonable amount of time to read
legislation that will be voted upon. Prohibits votes on
legislation from occurring until ten days after its introduction,
with the intent of giving lawmakers enough time to read bills
before voting on them; allots 72 hours for House members and
staff to examine the contents of amendments. Paul charged his
fellow legislators with voting for the Patriot Act in 2001
without reading it first; more than 300 pages long, it was
enacted into law less than 24 hours after being
introduced.[32]
- Congressional Responsibility and Accountability Act. H.R. 3302,
2007-08-01. Prohibits federal rules and regulations not
enacted into law by Congress, if they result in job loss or exceed
specified costs to individuals, corporations, or all persons in
aggregate.
- American Freedom Agenda Act of
2007. H.R. 3835,
2007-10-15. To restore the Constitution's checks and balances and
protections against government abuses as envisioned by the Founding
Fathers. Proposes to "bar the use of evidence obtained through
torture; require that federal intelligence gathering is conducted
in accordance with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA); create a mechanism for challenging presidential signing
statements; repeal the Military Commissions Act, which, among other
things, denies habeas corpus to certain detainees; prohibit
kidnapping, detentions, and torture abroad; protect journalists who
publish information received from the executive branch; and ensure
that secret evidence is not used to designate individuals or
organizations with a presence in the U.S. as foreign
terrorists."[33]
- See also the limited government and income tax abolition
amendment.
States'
rights
We the People
Act
- We the People Act. H.R. 539, 2009-01-14,
originally H.R. 3893,
2004-03-04. Forbids all federal courts from hearing cases on
abortion, same-sex unions,
sexual practices, and establishment of religion, unless such a case
were a challenge to the Constitutionality of federal law. Makes
federal court decisions on those subjects nonbinding as precedent
in state courts,[34]
and forbids federal courts from spending money to enforce their
judgments.
Because it forbids federal courts from adjudicating "any claim
involving the laws, regulations, or policies of any State or unit
of local government relating to the free exercise or establishment
of religion", secularists have criticized the bill as
removing federal remedy for allegations of state violation of
religious freedom.[35] As an
example of potential for violation, Article 1 of the Texas
Constitution provides the (currently unenforced) requirement
that office-holders "acknowledge the existence of a Supreme Being".
The Democratic Underground online
community published the holding that the bill would give state
sexual-orientation laws special immunity.[36] The
bill is comparable to other jurisdiction stripping
legislation such as the Constitution Restoration
Act.[37]
Paul told Congress, "The best guarantor of true liberty is
decentralized political institutions, while the greatest threat to
liberty is concentrated power."[37]
In April 2006 the Traditional Values
Coalition encouraged its contacts to lobby their
representatives for passage;[38] the
bill was also endorsed by columnist Rev. Chuck Baldwin,[37]
and cosponsors include Roscoe Bartlett, Tom Tancredo, Sam Johnson, Walter Jones, Jr., John A.
Sullivan, John Duncan, Jr., and Ted Poe.
Abortion
Stem-cell
research
Capital
punishment
Education
- Teacher certification (amendment): Prohibited funding of
federal teacher
certification.[2]
- Family Education Freedom
Act of 2009. H.R. 1951,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 1816,
1997-06-05.[42]
Provides tax credits to families towards spending on any type of
children's education–related expenses, public, private, or homeschool.
- Education Improvement Tax Cut Act. H.R. 1952,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 936,
1999-03-02. Applies a $5,000 tax credit per child for
donations to any school in support of scholarships or academic or
extracurricular programs.[43]
- Teacher Tax Cut Act of 2009. H.R. 1949,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 937,
1999-03-02. Provides all elementary and secondary school
teachers with a $1,000 tax cut.
- Hope Plus Scholarship Act of 2009. H.R. 1953,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 2410,
2001-06-28. Includes qualified education expenses within the
Hope Scholarship Credit.
- Professional Educators Tax Relief Act of 2009. H.R. 1950,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 2411,
2001-06-28. Gives all K–12 school librarians, counselors, and
other personnel the same $1,000 tax credit as the Teacher Tax Cut
Act.[44]
- Make College Affordable Act of 2009. H.R. 1954,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 401, 2005-01-26,
cosponsored since H.R. 1631,
1999-04-29. Creates full tax deduction for higher education
expenses and interest on student loans.
- Education Professional Development Tax Credit Act of 2007.
H.R. 4078,
2007-11-05. To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow
elementary and secondary school teachers a credit against income
tax for professional development and
training expenses.
Sexual orientation
legislation
- Marriage Protection Act of
2007. H.R. 724, 2007-01-30,
originally H.R. 3313, 2003-10-16
(cosponsor). To limit Federal court jurisdiction over questions
under the Defense of Marriage Act. Explicitly permits states
to continue making a public-policy exception when deciding the
status of same-sex relationships
independently of the decisions of other states, as states have in
fact been permitted to do in the case of incestuous marriages.[45]
Environment
- A bill to repeal the Soil and Water Conservation Act of
1977. H.R. 7079,
1980-04-16.
- Dredging: H.R. 7245,
1980-05-01. Amends the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to
remove federal jurisdiction from dumping in private (nonnavigable)
waters, and from state dumping permit programs; permits applicants,
rather than the Secretary of the
Army, to specify disposal sites when requesting permission to
discharge dredged or fill material into interstate navigable
waters.
- Fisheries: H.R. 3735,
1998-04-28. To disapprove a rule requiring the use of bycatch reduction devices in
the shrimp fishery of the Gulf of Mexico. Annuls federal
mandates that require private fisheries to reduce
catches of nontargeted species at their own cost.
- Environmental Protection Agency: H.J.Res. 104,
2000-07-13. Disapproves an EPA rule
published on 2000-07-13, relating to proposed revisions to its
pollutant discharge reduction program, federal antidegradation
policy, and water quality planning and management regulations.
- Lake Texana dam: Transferred ownership of the Lake Texana dam project
from the federal government to Texas.[2]
- San Jacinto disposal area: H.R. 4829,
2007-12-18. To authorize the Secretary of the Army to convey the
surface estate of the San Jacinto Disposal Area to the city of
Galveston, Texas.
- To provide for the transfer of certain Federal Property to
the Galveston Historical Foundation. H.R. 2121,
2009-04-27, originally H.R. 6440,
2008-07-08.
- Energy Efficient and Environmentally Friendly Automobile
Tax Credit Act of 2009. H.R. 1768,
2009-03-26, originally H.R. 6441,
2008-07-08.
Health
Health
reform
- Quality Health Care Coalition Act of 2009. H.R. 1493,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 1247,
2003-03-12. Exempts health care professionals from antitrust
laws in their negotiations with health plans and health insurance
issuers.
- Comprehensive Health Care Reform Act of 2009. H.R. 1495,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 1287,
2003-03-13. Strengthens health savings accounts and credit for
health care costs, carries forward unused health benefits, and
repeals threshold on medical expenses deduction.
- Seniors' Health Care Freedom Act of 2009. H.R. 164, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 580, 2005-02-02,
cosponsored since H.R. 2867,
1999-09-14. Facilitates private contracts under Medicare.
- Nursing Home Emergency Assistance Act. H.R. 1494,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 4002,
2005-10-06.
- Treat Physicians Fairly Act of 2009. H.R. 1497,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 4872,
2006-03-02. Creates tax credit to medical care providers
against income tax for uncompensated emergency medical care, and
deduction to hospitals for such care.
- Enhanced Options for Rural Health Care Act of 2007. H.R. 1899,
2007-04-17, originally H.R. 6154,
2006-09-21. Gives specific permission for rural health
facilities designated as critical access hospitals to offer
assisted living services without losing their designation.
Tax cuts
- Prescription Drug Affordability Act. H.R. 163, 2009-01-06,
originally H.R. 3636, 2000-02-10
(Pharmaceutical Freedom Act). Creates prescription
drug tax credit and facilitates import and Internet sale of
such drugs.
- Cancer and Terminal Illness Patient Health Care Act. H.R. 4684,
2007-12-13, originally H.R. 4265,
2000-04-13. Assists those suffering from cancer and other life-threatening illnesses by waiving
the employee portion of Social Security taxes.
- Child Health Care Affordability Act. H.R. 1496,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 4799, 2000-06-29
(Family Health Tax Cut Act). Creates income tax credit for
medical expenses for dependents.
- Freedom From Unnecessary Litigation Act of 2009. H.R. 1498,
2009-03-12, originally H.R. 1249,
2003-03-12. Creates tax credit for the cost of insurance
against negative outcomes from surgery, such as against malpractice
of a physician.
- Evacuees Tax Relief Act of 2008. H.R. 7055,
2008-09-24, originally H.R. 4066,
2005-10-17.
- Phosphoric acid: H.R. 961, 2009-02-10,
originally H.R. 3732,
2007-10-02. To suspend temporarily the duty on phosphoric
acid, lanthanum salt, cerium terbium-doped, compounds which have
medical uses.
Health
freedom
- Medical
Marijuana Patient Protection Act. H.R. 5842,
2008-04-17, cosponsored since H.R. 2592, 2001-07-23
(States' Rights to Medical Marijuana Act). Protects authorized
medical marijuana patients and protects
state-legal farmers against federal raids. Lets states choose their
own stances on medical marijuana regulations, and permits further
study, regulation, and use by reclassifying the plant
medically.
- Parental Consent Act of 2007. H.R. 2387,
2007-05-17, originally H.R. 5236, 2004-10-06
(Let Parents Raise Their Kids Act). To prohibit the use of Federal
funds for any universal or mandatory mental health screening
program.
- Health Freedom Protection Act. H.R. 2117,
2007-05-02, originally H.R. 4282,
2005-11-09. Amends the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act regarding health claims of foods and dietary
supplements. Authorizes specific health claims to be made about saw
palmetto, omega-3 fatty
acids, glucosamine, chondroitin sulfate, and calcium. Establishes government
burden of proof in false advertising cases.
-
Act to Remove Federal Penalties for the Personal Use of Marijuana
by Responsible Adults. H.R. 5843, 2008-04-17
(cosponsor).
Agriculture
- Ag and rural legislation: Cofounded Congressional Rural Caucus, a bipartisan
group which promotes legislation to help the agriculture industry
and rural communities.
- Agriculture Education Freedom Act. H.R. 1955,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 3626,
1998-04-01. Makes nontaxable the sale of animals raised and
sold as part of an educational program.
- Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2009. H.R. 1866,
2009-04-02, originally H.R. 3037,
2005-06-22. Excludes industrial hemp
from the definition of marihuana for Controlled Substances Act
purposes, thereby giving the states the power to regulate and
permit farming of hemp. The measure would be a first since the
national prohibition of industrial hemp farming in the United
States. Paul joined prominent liberal Democrats in urging this
proposal. He contends that it would help North Dakota and other agriculture states,
where farmers have requested the ability to farm hemp for
years.[46]
The
Economist wrote that his support for hemp farming could
appeal to farmers in Iowa.[47]
- Seafood: H.Con.Res. 125,
2007-04-23 (cosponsor). Recognizing the health benefits of eating
seafood as part of a balanced diet, and supporting the goals and
ideals of National Seafood
Month.
- Unpasteurized milk: H.R. 778, 2009-01-28,
originally H.R. 4077,
2007-11-05. To authorize the interstate traffic of unpasteurized milk and milk
products that are packaged for direct human consumption
between states permitting its sale.
Ballot
access
- Voter Freedom Act of 2007. H.R. 3600,
2007-09-19, originally H.R. 2477,
1997-09-16. Establishes the right of ballot access for candidates with timely
petitions containing 1,000 signatures.
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External
links