After Brexit, what? U.S. secessionists
hankering for 'Texit'
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[June 25, 2016]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Emboldened by
Brexit, U.S. secessionists in Texas are keen to adopt the campaign
tactics used to sway the British vote for leaving the European Union and
are demanding "Texit" comes next.
The citizen-driven vote in Britain can be a model for Texas, which
was an independent country from 1836 to 1845, and its $1.6 trillion
a year economy would be among the 10 largest in the world, said
Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement.
"The Texas Nationalist Movement is formally calling on the Texas
governor to support a similar vote for Texans," the group said on
Friday. The office of Texas Governor Greg Abbott was not immediately
available for comment.
The group, which claims about a quarter million supporters, failed
earlier this year to place a vote on secession on the November
ballot but aims to relaunch its campaign for the next election cycle
in 2018, buoyed by the British vote, Miller said.
"Texit is in the air," he said.
Texit, for Texas exit, is a play on the British exit, or Brexit, and
was trending on Twitter in the United States on Friday.
"Yee-haw! #Brexit shows how to get it done. Now we need a #Texit,"
tweeted user Phillip Paulson (@PaulsonPhillip).
Constitutional scholars, however, say a U.S. state cannot break
away, but this has not stopped hundreds of secessionist schemes
throughout the nation's history. No state has been formed by
seceding from another since 1863, when West Virginia was created
during the Civil War.
From Maine to Alaska, the bids to break away by groups often angry
at taxation or what they see as an infringement of their liberties
have been unsuccessful either due to the nearly impossible legal
challenges or lack of support.
A 2014 Reuters/Ipsos poll showed nearly a quarter of Americans are
open to their states leaving the union.
In Texas and other states, the Brexit vote came too late for U.S.
secessionist to use it as a springboard to launch drives resulting
in ballot measures for the November election.
But it did push the idea that if they can land a measure on the
ballot for secession, they have a good chance to win over voters.
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Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks at a campaign rally for U.S.
Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz in Dallas, Texas February
29, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Stone
"We intend to mimic that process here in California by putting an
independence referendum on the ballot so we can exercise our right
to self-determination and vote to leave or remain part of the
American Union," said Louis Marinelli, president of the secessionist
group, the Yes California Independence Campaign.
VERMONT REPUBLIC?
The group, which opposes what it calls mass domestic surveillance
and militarization of California’s local police departments, said
the state has the resources to go it alone and doing so will be in
the best interest of Californians.
Campaigns have been simmering for years in places like Hawaii and in
New Hampshire, where the Free State Project has been looking to have
20,000 people move to the New England state and set up a colony of
like-minded people opposed to big government.
Most movements are small and centered around a few leaders. A
campaign for secession in Vermont called the Second Vermont Republic
lost steam when its founder Thomas Naylor died in 2012. The group
was pushing for a small, democratic, nonviolent and egalitarian
state.
"Tom would have been happy," his widow Magdalena Naylor said of the
Brexit vote.
(Additional reporting by Jim Forsyth in San Antonio; Editing by
Cynthia Osterman)
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