Some people say. you cannot recall a Senator, and that anyone who says you can is a shit-head. I guess John Armor is just another shit-head, after all, he only practiced law in the U.S. Supreme Court for 33 years. Seems that decision has been made, and the answer is "Yes, you can".
He doesn't seem to make that claim universally though:
"When the 17th Amendment was ratified and went into effect to make senators elected by the people rather than appointed by the state legislatures, it provided additional reasons to uphold recall where provided. This Amendment repeated, word for word, the language of the basic Constitution that the state voters would be those for "the most numerous branch of the state legislature." It left to the states the definition of who could vote and how the elections would be conducted."
Some people say. you cannot recall a Senator, and that anyone who says you can is a shit-head. I guess John Armor is just another shit-head, after all, he only practiced law in the U.S. Supreme Court for 33 years. Seems that decision has been made, and the answer is "Yes, you can".
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2010/04/is_a_statebased_recall_of_a_us.html
He doesn't seem to make that claim universally though: "When the 17th Amendment was ratified and went into effect to make senators elected by the people rather than appointed by the state legislatures, it provided additional reasons to uphold recall where provided. This Amendment repeated, word for word, the language of the basic Constitution that the state voters would be those for "the most numerous branch of the state legislature." It left to the states the definition of who could vote and how the elections would be conducted."