I'm more interested in the concept in general. Red or Blue states refusing to comply with Federal laws that they feel are unconstitutional or that don't represent the interests of the state.
How would that work in practice? The article suggests just ignoring the federal law - or in some cases - passing state Bills that formally say they will ignore the federal law. I believe that has happened in both red and blue states to some extent. The article gives this example with respect to gun rights :
While not having immediate examples at hand, I feel that blue states are exercising the same sort of push-back by enacting their own drug enforcement edicts and by deciding not to co-operate with the feds on issues of immigration.Already, we are seeing some movement in the states on the nullification front. The Arizona Senate passed a bill that declares it will not enforce federal gun control laws. Oklahoma, South Dakota and North Dakota legislators have all introduced legislation that nullifies Biden’s executive orders.
Again, I'm not arguing for or against any particular state issue, but I would love to see more states push back against the erosion of their sovereignty and their week kneed abdication to a federal government that holds no legal authority over them.
Any chance that we will see a resurgence of Federalism?