EL PASO — Bad news for thousands of people who wanted
to see Texas secede: The state is still in the U.S.
The White House has responded to a petition asking that Texas be
allowed to break away from the country, saying the Founding Fathers who created
the nation “did not provide a right to walk away from it.”
More than 125,000 people signed the petition, which was created a
few days after President Barack Obama won re-election. The White House has
promised to respond to any petition that gets more than 25,000 signatures within
30 days.
Jon Carson, director of the White House Office of Public
Engagement, issued a response quoting Abraham Lincoln’s first inaugural address
and a Supreme Court opinion after the Civil War. It said America was created as
a “perpetual union,” but one that allows people with different beliefs to debate
the issues.
“Democracy can be noisy and controversial,” Carson said. “Free
and open debate is what makes this country work … But as much as we value a
healthy debate, we don’t let that debate tear us apart.”
The petition was created Micah Hurd, a Texas National Guardsman
and an engineering student at the University of Texas in Arlington. He couldn’t
be reached for comment Monday.
In asking that Texas be allowed to leave the country, the
petition cited the “economic difficulties stemming from the federal government’s
neglect to reform domestic and foreign spending.” It argued that given the size
of Texas’ economy and because the state has a balanced budget, it would be
“practically feasible for Texas to withdraw from the union.”
The petition also said the federal government didn’t share the
same values held by the Founding Fathers.
But Carson argued that the writers of the U.S. Constitution
addressed the need for policy change through elections, not secession.
The petition’s success brought overnight fame for Hurd, though
briefly got him in trouble. In December, a regiment commander at the Texas
National Guard sent an email to his subordinates, including Hurd, saying “any
mention of secession better happen on a civilian venue.”
“It’s only talk, and rather ignorant talk at that,” the commander
wrote. “If you’ve already done something to call attention to yourself or our
regiment in this matter, make it go away.”
But a few days later, a National Guard spokeswoman said Hurd had
done nothing wrong and that “the email asking him not to talk about it”
shouldn’t have been sent.
A telephone listing for Hurd couldn’t be found Monday by The
Associated Press. His father, who has spoken on behalf of his son in the past,
didn’t immediately return a phone message.
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