Justice Antonin Scalia Opposed a Constitutional Convention
"I certainly would not want a Constitutional
Convention. I mean whoa. Who knows what would come out of that?" -
Justice Antonin Scalia, April 17, 2014 (Click here to see video of Scalia's
statement.)
In a recent email from former U.S. Senator Tom Coburn
(R-Okla.) to Oklahoma state legislators encouraging them to pass the Convention
of States application for a "limited convention," Coburn used a
supportive quote attributed to the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
The quote, as it appeared in the email, reads:
"If the only way to clarify the law, if the only way to
remove us from utter bondage to the Congress, is to take what I think to be a
minimal risk on this limited convention, then let's take it." ~ Justice
Antonin Scalia~ Reading this, one might believe that this portrays a recent
view of the late justice, especially since Coburn's citation says
"Justice." However, this is misleading.
Although no date was provided with the quote, the quote
comes from remarks delivered by Scalia at a forum hosted by the American
Enterprise Institute on May 23, 1979 - seven years before President Ronald
Reagan nominated Scalia to the Supreme Court. The AEI forum was entitled,
"A Constitutional Convention: How Well Would It Work?" and was
moderated by former ABC News chief John Charles Daly.
Scalia was not a justice of the Supreme Court when he said
those words, but rather a law professor at the University of Chicago Law School.
At the time, Scalia also worked at the American Enterprise Institute, which he
was addressing when he spoke in favor of the idea of a limited convention.
However, contrary to Senator Coburn's attempt to protray
Scalia as a supporter of an Article V constitutional convention, the quote he
uses from 1979 does not accurately reflect Scalia's recent views on the subject
of a modern-day constitutional convention.
On April 17, 2014, Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and
Ruth Bader Ginsburg appeared on an episode of the Kalb Report, a one-on-one
panel discussion television and radio program jointly produced by the National
Press Club Journalism Institute, the George Washington University, and the
Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. The subject
of their program was "A Conversation about the First Amendment."
During the program, host Marvin Kalb asked a question from
Seth Dawson of the Office of Congressman Denny Heck (D-Wash.) regarding Justice
John Paul Stevens's recent suggestion of a constitutional amendment to modify
the Second Amendment. The question was, "If you could amend the
Constitution in one way, what would it be, and why?" The first to answer
was Scalia, who replied (click on above image for video):
I certainly would not want a Constitutional Convention. I
mean whoa. Who knows what would come out of that?
Scalia acknowledged the difficulty of amending the
Constitution and speaking in the context of amendments he clearly warned
against the notion of convening a convention, which is the second method for
amending the Constitution under Article V.
Following a speech Scalia gave to the Federalist Society in
Morristown, New Jersey, on May 8, 2015, during the question-and-answer session,
Scalia was asked whether a constitutional convention would be in the nation's
interest.
"A constitutional convention is a horrible idea,"
Scalia replied. "This is not a good century to write a constitution."
Although the Convention of States (COS) Project would have
one believe that a constitutional convention is a "totally different
creature" from an Article V convention or "convention of the
states," as they call it, this is simply not true.
Black's Law Dictionary, the definitive legal lexicon in
American law, defines the term constitutional convention, then refers to an
Article V convention as an example of one:
Constitutional convention. A duly constituted assembly of
delegates or representatives of the people of a state or nation for the purpose
of framing, revising, or amending its constitution. Art. V of U.S. Const.
provides that a Constitutional Convention may be called on application of the
Legislatures of two-thirds of the states. [Emphasis added]
This definition of a constitutional convention originates
from the second edition of A Law Dictionary: Containing Definitions of the
Terms and Phrases of American and English Jurisprudence, Ancient, and Modern
published in 1910, by Henry Campbell Black (1860-1927), and remains unchanged
in contemporary editions of Black's Law Dictionary.
Professor Scalia may have entertained the notion of a
convention back in 1979, but by 2014 Justice Scalia was firmly set against it
and rightly so, noting the uncertainty that could arise from such a modern
convention. This is especially true given today's political climate and
prevailing lack of education about the Constitution. The solution, as The John
Birch Society advocates and Justice Scalia understood throughout his judicial
career, is adhering to the Constitution, not changing it by way of amendments
at an unpredictable convention.
First Action Request:
Click here for the phone number of your state legislators.
Phone them and ask them to vote against all bills and resolutions making
application to Congress to call a convention for proposing amendments. Tell
them that our state legislatures and Congress should enforce the Constitution,
not rewrite it.
Second Action Request:
Click here to send a prewritten, editable message to your
state legislators. It is preferable (to get the maximum impact) to edit the
message in some way, such as adding opening or closing remarks, or editing the
message itself. Then send the email message.
Thanks.
Your Friends at The John Birch Society
Comments
The method we’ve used to pass all Amendments is for the
Congress to draft the Amendment and send it to the States for ratification. The
bad Amendments like “equal pay” died in the States. Amending our Constitution deserves a high
bar, especially now with the Communists in charge. All of the Left-wingers are working to get this Article V Con Con approved.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment