NH Impeachment Resolution: Betty Hall Interview
New Hampshire Impeachment Resolution: Interview with Betty Hall
The ship of
state is drifting and it’s getting hard to steer
It’s a complicated issue but the direction’s
pretty clear
And each of us is who we need to get
to there from here
In these times
Noel Paul
Stookey, “In These Times”
As someone who once helped a group of people push a stranded scow back out into the Pacific Ocean, I know personally what people can achieve when the tide is right. In this brief email interview with Betty Hall, she says:
I find every
voter I talk to has a tipping point when they say either to
themselves or to the public “Why weren't these guys
impeached long ago”... We all need to know the truth
before we can fix it. Congress has not been able to get the
truth without impeachment. I believe an impeachment-driven
investigation must begin so we can start get at the real
truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
truth.
SCOOP:
What has been and will be
the process of getting HR24 passed and delivered to
Congress? For example, does the NH Senate have to pass a
similar resolution?
HALL:
I was able to introduce it
into the legislature as any bill or resolution can be
introduced by a legislator. It is then sent to committee,
has a public hearing and the committee votes it's
recommendation and then it goes to the floor of the
legislature for an up or down vote in the New Hampshire
legislature. No bill can be killed in
committee.
SCOOP:
What prompted you to sponsor HR24?
HALL:
I have served in the New Hampshire House for 14
terms (28 years), not all consecutive. I was in the House
when a resolution similar to the one I have introduced was
introduced in I believe the 1973 session to impeach Nixon. I
didn't vote for it then and I have regretted it ever since.
I feel that this administration is worse than Watergate and
this time I must stand up because I didn't at that time when
I should have. Impeachment is a tool to get the truth, hold
our leaders accountable and restore our Constitution.
SCOOP:
What kind of support are you getting within NH
and around the country?
HALL:
I find every voter I
talk to has a tipping point when they say either to
themselves or to the public “Why weren't these guys
impeached long ago”. I read that 80 percent of this
country believes we are going in the wrong direction. It
seems like more and more encounter this tipping point every
day.
How much more damage can be done right now and how can we sweep this under the rug any longer? Most people would like to see the present incumbents replaced but even when they do it won't automatically turn the ship of state around. We all need to know the truth before we can fix it.
Congress has not been able to get the truth without impeachment. I believe an impeachment-driven investigation must begin so we can start get at the real truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
More and more people are speaking out and standing up. I have had over five hundred letters from New Hampshire and several thousand from around the country—all of them spontaneous and beautifully written, expressing heartfelt concern—and many, many hits on my website.
Why didn't I do this long ago?
Details for the April 14 rally and concert in Concord, NH, are available here. At time of writing, rally organizer Stuart Hutchinson of says that speakers and performers are:
Rep. Betty Hall, Daniel Ellsberg, Phil Burk, Robert Bowman, Ramsey Clark, Doris Granny D Haddock, John Nirenberg, John Nichols, with surprises and music by Noel Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul & Mary, REBECCA McCALL, who will premiere her new song, IMPEACHMENT, and the sensational band RUSTBUCKET!
For more details on the Rally Concert for 24 to Impeach, CLICK— Box Office Phone 1.603.225.1111 — Rally Concert tix are only $14 each! To buy tickets CLICK IMPEACH TIX!
From
the State Government Overview at:
http://www.nh.gov/nhinfo/stgovt.html
The
Legislative Branch is also known as the General Court of New
Hampshire. It consists of two chambers, the House of
Representatives and the Senate. There are 400
Representatives and 24 Senators, making the General Court
the second largest legislature in the United States
following the U.S. Congress. It is said that only the U.S.
congress and the English and Indian Parliaments are
larger.
New Hampshire takes pride in its Citizen Legislature, so called because members to the General Court are not professional politicians, but come from a variety of occupations. Professions of members include the self-employed, retired, homemakers, students, and lawyers. For their time and effort they are paid $200 per term plus mileage costs. Because of their added duties, the Speaker of the House and the Senate President receive $250 per term.
(In my interview, I also asked Hall what the Citizen Legislature means in real terms.)
HALL:
It made it
possible for me to run for office. I could knock on every
door in my district, ride my bike and get acquainted. I did
not have to raise a lot of money. And I had
fun!!!
Makeup of the New Hampshire State Legislature
from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Hampshire_General_Court
On
December 6, 2006, the General Court convened its 160th
session and certified the results from the State General
Election. The election gave Democrats majority control of
both chambers for the first time since 1874, 14-10 in the
Senate and 239-161 in the house.
The House of Representatives consists of 400 members coming from 103 districts across the state created from divisions of the state's counties each making up about 3,000 residents for every one legislator. If the same level of representation were present in Congress, the U.S. House of Representatives would have approximately 99,000 members according to current population estimates.
--PEACE—