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The Republic Security & Federal Restoration Plan: A Declaration of Constitutional Breach and Mandated Intervention

​The United States Constitution is a charter of delegated authority, not a list of optional suggestions. Nowhere within the articles or sections of the Constitution, nor in the writings of the Founding Fathers, is any delegated power framed as optional or discretionary. Because the duties of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial branches are mandated by the document itself, they are ministerial in nature; therefore, they must be performed as commanded by the authors of the Constitution.

​Article IV, Section 4 of the United States Constitution is not a suggestion, nor is it a recommendation. It is a binding, ministerial command that guarantees every state in the Union a "Republican Form of Government". This guarantee is a promise from the federal government to all the states, and it is the absolute, non-discretionary duty of the entirety of Congress to enforce it.

​The State of California, through its policies and the actions of its political subdivisions, is in open revolt against the requirements of the Constitution. By explicitly and repeatedly prioritizing the presence of non-citizens who have committed heinous crimes—including murder, rape, assault, and property destruction—over the fundamental safety and property of its own citizenry, the state has objectively demonstrated that it no longer operates as a republic dedicated to the security of its people.

​These overt acts have occurred in broad daylight and have been documented time and time again; they are self-evident and require no further investigation. The evidence is absolute and indisputable: the State of California has abandoned its primary obligation to its citizens.

​The federal government’s failure to intervene is driven by the fear of violent retribution from the opposition. Congress is currently more afraid of the organized backlash from the opposition than it is of the failure of the Republic as a whole. This cowardice has paralyzed the institution, signaling to other states—such as Oregon, Washington, Michigan, and New York—that they may also abandon the rule of law without consequence. This failure to act is not a policy choice; it is a surrender of the Republic to those who operate outside of it.

​Consequently, Congress has a mandatory, ministerial requirement to exercise its plenary power to intervene, take over the government of the State of California, and restore a functional republican form of government. This is an administrative duty that Congress cannot ignore or bypass. If the entirety of Congress refuses to exercise this authority, they are effectively condoning the violation of the constitutional compact and have thereby betrayed the American people. By maintaining a position of inaction, Congress signals that the protection of the citizenry is no longer a federal priority, and in doing so, the institution forfeits all of its remaining legitimacy.