Biden told by GOP state AGs they're willing to sue if administration oversteps authority

West Virginia led the group of 6 states in the warning to the new president

A coalition of six red states led by West Virginia sent a letter to the Biden administration Wednesday saying that they're watching its actions closely and willing to sue if they believe the new president is doing anything that runs afoul of individual rights, federal law or the Constitution. 

The group of Republican states was led by West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey. The message comes after blue states for four years inundated the Trump administration with lawsuits. California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who is now President Biden's nominee for Health and Human Services secretary, filed more than 100 lawsuits against the Trump administration. 

"The President cannot cut constitutional corners or shirk statutory strictures without inevitably doing more harm to our country than good," the letter says. "[B]y this letter we respectfully urge you when pursuing your policy priorities to honor the core constitutional tenets which should be appreciated and respected by every person entrusted with the honor and burdens of the presidency."

President Joe Biden delivers remarks on racial equity, in the State Dining Room of the White House, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

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The letter warns the Biden administration that the states are willing to pursue legal action if they believe the federal government is violating individual constitutional rights; exceeding limits on its powers; Biden is grabbing too much power for himself; or if the administrative state is not being held in check. 

"We stand ready to meet with your administration to discuss more how the issues below affect our states; litigation is never a first option, and we would like to help your team in its important job on behalf of all Americans, consistent with the Constitution and the rule of law," the letter says. "Yet if you sign unconstitutional laws passed by Congress, it will be our responsibility and duty to challenge those laws and court."

The letter also says that if executive officials or agencies" go beyond the bounds of their statutory authority, fail to follow legally required procedures, or fall short of the bedrock Administrative Procedure Act obligation of reasoned decisionmaking, it will likewise be our responsibility to take action."

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The coalition of states also includes the state attorneys general of  Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana and Texas. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton grabbed headlines in the aftermath of the presidential election with an ill-fated Supreme Court case that aimed to invalidate the results of the presidential election in four states that voted for Biden. All of the states on the Wednesday letter but Alaska backed Texas' case. 

The Biden administration is off to a fast start with executive orders -- the president signed 22 executive orders as of Tuesday. The most executive orders any president signed in his first 10 days besides Biden was former President Trump, who signed 6. 

Biden's orders have touched on transgender people serving in the military, the coronavirus pandemic, private prisons, revoking Trump's 1776 Commission and much more. 

Fox News' Remy Numa contributed to this report. 

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