Parental rights needed in US Constitution
AFP
WASHINGTON (AFP) - Two US lawmakers plan to offer a "Parents' Rights" amendment to the US Constitution next week to rebut what they call unnecessary government intrusion in family life, officials said Friday.
Representative Pete Hoekstra and Senator Jim DeMint, both conservative Republicans, will launch on Tuesday the difficult process of changing the founding document of political life in the United States, Hoekstra's office said.
"Parental rights are generally recognized and respected today, but instances of unnecessary governmental intrusion in family life are on the rise," said Hoekstra.
To succeed, the measure will need to pass the US Senate and House of Representatives by two-thirds majorities each, then win ratification by three-fourths of the states.
The amendment takes aim at international measures that could supercede US law at a time when some conservatives have recoiled at possible US ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
"No treaty may be adopted nor shall any source of international law be employed to supersede, modify, interpret or apply to the rights guaranteed by this article," the amendment text read.
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Image from faculty.unlv.edu/pwerth/US-constitution.