While I have tried to make it a practice of late not to directly address you, because you refuse to engage in honest debate or discussion, I will attempt to address your mixed up hodge podge of questions above.
This is an amazing claim from someone who never engages in honest discourse and when called on his false claims can’t back up then when challenged answers questions with a question and uses dishonest tactics like deflecting and obfuscating.
My mixed up hodge podge of questions? What a moronic claim. I am the ONLY one staying the course on a thread you are dishonestly dodging and deflecting and wandering off topic on. This isn’t about the Supreme Court or the Florida AG, it is about the Virginia AG and your moronic claims that he can pick and choose which laws to enforce and moving Virginia Liberal.
You truly are a dishonest dunce of epic proportions.
1. It is not stated in any Constitution that "an AG selectively enforce a States laws based on his/her interpretation of the Constitution". While I am not sure of what you mean by the phrase in quotes, I don't think I ever claimed it was stated in any Constitution. The AG must enforce the law, he however is not required to defend all laws as Constitutional when challenged in Court. In fact, as a lawyer, he has an ethical obligation to refrain from doing so when no legal basis exist to do so.
What law was challenged in court?
2. As to your question about a Conservative AG choosing not to enforce a law, I feel it is his duty to enforce the law, I do not believe it is his duty to defend the law in the Supreme Court, if no legal basis for doing so exists.
I didn’t ask you what you believed, I asked you where it states that an AG can SELECTIVELY pick and choose which laws he is going to enforce?
No one has taken this law to the Supreme Court; so why the obfuscation about defending laws at the Supreme Court?
It was a petty partisan statement by an AG that got elected by an extremely slim margin in a partisan claim by you that this indicates, somehow, that the State is turning “blue.”
He cannot CHOOSE to not defend the laws passed by a State Legislature. That is a violation of his oath to uphold the States laws. If he believes there is a Constitutional question, there are LEGAL remedies for doing so.
So again you do not answer, but deflect like the dishonest uneducated dunce that you are.
3. If such an event occurred in a historically liberal state, and the state elected an AG who was Conservative, and fulfilling his duties as a Conservative, I would tend to agree that such was evidence of a movement toward conservatism.
First off, I asked if you would be okay with it if a State legislature passed a law in support of gay marriage and a Conservative AG determined that it was unconstitutional and therefore choose not to enforce it.
Yes or no? Claiming it is would be an indication of a movement towards conservatism is as stupid and dishonest as your claim Virginia is because an AG chooses not to do what he was elected to do; defend the State’s laws.