There are Amendments to
the US Constitution proposed by some states to be resolved by a “never done
before” method being referred to as the Convention of States or the Article V
Convention. This process started with votes by some State Legislatures to
request that Congress call a Constitutional Convention. This method is not recommended.
All current Amendments
to the US Constitution were ratified by the States after the Amendments were
drafted by the US Congress. This method is recommended.
The following article
below goes into detail: Some Thoughts on the Proposal Before the Legislature to
Call a Convention Empowered to Change the United States Constitution, By Scott
N. Bradley
The Constitutionally
Defined Amendment Process - Article V of the United States Constitution
provides for two methods by which the Constitution may be changed:
Two thirds of both
Houses of Congress propose and three fourths of the state legislatures (or
three fourths of the conventions called by the U.S. Congress as ratifying
conventions) ratify the proposed amendments.
Two thirds of the states
apply to Congress, and then Congress calls a convention, and the resulting
amendments proposed by the convention are put before the state legislatures (or
before ratifying conventions called by the Congress), and by one or the other
means three fourths of those bodies ratify the proposed amendments.
To date, the first
approach is the only process by which the Constitution has been amended. The second process has elicited strongly
worded warnings from many prominent legal minds regarding the risks that they
associate with it.
Is the Limited Scope of
a Convention Guaranteed? It is
interesting to note the proposers of a modern convention claim that a modern
convention can and would be limited in scope.
Several things contradict that position.
When the 1787 Convention
was called by the United States Congress, it was called as a limited convention
that was charged and called "for the sole and express purpose of revising
the Articles of Confederation," thereby rendering "the federal
constitution adequate to the exigencies of government, and the preservation of
the Union."
A modern dictionary
defines the word "revise" thus: "to amend or to
alter." Noah Webster's 1828
American Dictionary defines revise: "1. To review; to re-examine; to look
over with care for correction; as, to revise a writing; to revise a proof
sheet. 2. To review, alter and amend;
as, to revise statutes."
By the definition in
common use during the American founding era, it sounds like the assignment
given to the 1787 Convention was "for the sole and express purpose of
revising the Articles of Confederation," which was to "review, alter
and amend" the then existing constitution, The Articles of Confederation,
not to replace it with a new constitution written from scratch. We may assume from the definitions that the
assignment given to the 1787 Convention was not to discard the existing
constitution and write another. They
were simply to amend it to make it function better. It appears that they were given the exact
assignment the promoters of an Article V-type Convention (by whatever name it
is denominated) would have us believe could not possibly result in a
"runaway" convention and an entirely new constitution. But it did in 1787. Regardless of how we interpret the
definitions, we know the course they took in 1787, and an entirely new
constitution resulted.
When the delegates
gathered in Philadelphia in May of 1787, they recognized that in their role
they were legally authorized to set the existing constitution aside and create
an entirely new constitution. Could this
be used as a precedent by a modern convention as justification for a similar
action?
Some during the
ratification period of the new 1787 Constitution were convinced that the
convention had become what would be termed in the modern vernacular a
"runaway convention." Patrick
Henry was one who held this opinion:
"That they exceeded
their power is perfectly clear...The federal convention ought to have amended
the old system-for this purpose they were solely delegated. The object of their mission extended to no
other considerations."
Based upon the actual
events that occurred in 1787, is there the slightest possibility that it could
happen again? Would wishful thinking and
ivory tower debates prevent a modern convention from taking some action that
amends the current Constitution out of existence once a convention was called? Would it be possible to leave small vestiges
of the current Constitution untouched while eviscerating the great portion of
sound principles upon which our liberty has been preserved for the past two
hundred plus years, thus technically complying with the requirement that the
Constitution be only amended?
The proposal before the
Legislature proposes to limit the Federal Government's power. In the context of what we are considering,
Founding Father Noah Webster defined "constitution" thus:
The established form of
government in a state, kingdom or country; a system of fundamental rules,
principles and ordinances for the government of a state or nation. In free
states, the constitution is paramount to the statutes or laws enacted by the
legislature, limiting and controlling its power; and in the United States, the
legislature is created, and its powers designated, by the constitution.
Webster defined
"paramount" as: 1. Superior to
all others. 2. Eminent; of the highest
order. Therefore, in its total, the United States Constitution is by definition
a delegation of power to the national government. In its entirety it defines the national
government's power to act. To pass a
resolution that would bring about a constitution convention for the purposes of
". . . limiting the power and jurisdiction of the federal government . .
." (as is proposed in this resolution before the Legislature) inherently
grants the proposed convention the authority to re-write and re-define the
entire United States Constitution.
Honestly ask yourself: "What element within the Constitution would
reasonably be exempted from such an open-ended assumption of power?" It literally encompasses the entire concept
of a constitution.
Historically, most of
the resolutions seeking a constitution convention (by whatever name the
advocates choose to denominate it) which have come before the Legislature have
promoted the idea that they were single issue proposals, and that any
convention which may be called as a result of these resolutions would be
restricted to addressing that single issue, and therefore would not place
broader issues in the Constitution at risk.
While this is a debatable supposition in those other resolutions, this
current resolution has dropped all pretense that the proposed convention will
be of limited scope. With this current
resolution before the Legislature, we need no longer pretend that the
convention which would be called as a result of this resolution cannot create
an entirely new constitution.
Consequently, this
resolution must be considered as the most dangerous resolution of its type
which has ever come before the Legislature.
This resolution is multi-pronged in its thrust to call a convention. It purports to "impose fiscal restraints
on the federal government," to "limit the power and jurisdiction of
the federal government," and "limit the terms of office for its
officials and for members of Congress."
It uses these innocuous-sounding euphemisms to inculcate benign
impressions of the expansive swaths which may be cut through the United States
Constitution if a convention for these purposes is called.
If the Convention of
1787 could consider themselves as operating within their congressional charter
to "revise" the then-existing constitution, the Articles of
Confederation, by setting aside that constitution and creating an entirely new
one, with a new process of ratification, to what lengths could a modern
convention with such a charge go? We do
not really, absolutely know, but is that immense possibility worth the risk?
The proponents of this
proposal cite their interpretation of Hamilton's statement in Federalist Number
85 as proof-positive that the convention he spoke of was intended to be a
single-issue matter that would be focused upon and brought to closure without
opening the entire Constitution to revision.
The proposed wording noted in #2, above, contradicts and calls into
question their intention for this to be such a convention, thus removing the
protective cover which they attempt to invoke upon their efforts and assuage
the fears of those who see dangers in the broadness and all-inclusiveness of
their proposed resolution.
The American Founders
and Article V - Promoters of a modern convention contend that the 1787
Constitution was sold by the Founders to the ratifying states on the basis that
they retained their ultimate authority over the federal government through
their Article V amendment powers. It is noted that James Madison, in Federalist
No. 43, specifically argued that states should use the power to correct errors
in the Constitution. And Alexander Hamilton in the "final argument"
of the Federalist Papers, in Federalist No. 85, said the Article V amendment
process was the means by which the states would rein in an out-of-control
federal government. Promoters of a modern convention contend that one cannot
take the Constitution seriously and contend that Article V was not meant to be
used. They would have us believe that Article V is a critical and "deal
closing" element of the balance of power created by the Constitution.
Remember, Article V
defines two ways to change the Constitution: The first way is the ONLY way it
has been changed since it was ratified:
2/3's of both Houses of Congress pass a proposed amendment and then
forward it to the States for ratification.
When 3/4's of the States ratify the amendment, it is part of the
Constitution. This method is a tried and
true method.
The other way (which has
never been done since the Constitution was ratified, but was the way the old
Constitution---The Articles of Confederation---was thrown out) is a
convention. That process involves 2/3's
of the States applying for (requesting) a convention. When that happens, the Constitution says that
Congress SHALL call a convention. Upon
reaching that required threshold of 2/3's of the States, the Congress shall
call the convention, and the convention will go forward.
Protections Supposedly
Afforded by the Current Arduous Ratification Process - While in their
propaganda the advocates of this resolution to call a modern convention use the
words of Patrick Henry to promote the illusion that the ratification bar is set
so high that the probability of a bad amendment being ratified is extremely
unlikely, a few facts from history must be considered.
The current ratification
requirements of approval by three fourths of the states are held up as a
protection against bad amendments. Many
who promote a modern convention claim that we have no worries about a bad amendment
being adopted because any proposed amendment must be ratified by ¾'s of the
states before becoming part of the Constitution. They say the probability of a bad amendment
making it through the hoops of ratification is extremely low.
FACT: When the U.S. Congress called the Convention
of 1787, the convention was called "for the sole and express purpose of
revising the Articles of Confederation," thereby rendering "the
federal constitution adequate to the exigencies of government, and the
preservation of the Union."
Recall that Founding
Father Noah Webster defined "REVISE" thus: "To review, alter and
amend." - In spite of their charge to simply amend the then-existing
Constitution, when the delegates gathered in Philadelphia in May of 1787, they
recognized that in their role they were legally authorized to set the existing
constitution aside and create an entirely new constitution.
As the 1787 Convention
met, the "old" constitution, the Articles of Confederation, required
100% of the states to agree to changes, and were considered by the 1787
convention delegates too difficult to succeed under. Consequently, without the prior approval of
the Congress, the states, or the people, the 1787 Convention determined that
ratification and implementation of the new Constitution they wrote would occur
with ratification by only nine of the states.
Could we be absolutely certain that any new constitution brought forth
by a modern convention would not include a new ratification process that would
virtually guarantee its ratification?
Regarding the supposed
safety found in the current constitution that 3/4's of the states must ratify
any proposed changes to the constitution:
Following are excellent examples of bad examples of amendments that
somehow met the requirement that three-quarters of the states ratify them.
The 14th Amendment: The
Most litigated Amendment, with the most tawdry tyranny-driven ratification. The
16th Amendment: Authorized the Income
Tax. The 17th Amendment: Destroyed the
States' Seat at the
Table of the National
Government (and violated the protection afforded the States in Article V
"that no State, without its Consent, shall be deprived of its equal
Suffrage in the Senate"---because the Senate no longer represented the
States, but, rather, represents the PEOPLE who elect them) by Direct Election
of Senators. The 18th Amendment:
Prohibition of Alcoholic Beverages
All of this happened
more than 100 years ago, when the general understanding of the base-line
principles of the Constitution were far better understood than they are
today. Could such a thing happen today? Could the states be bamboozled by slick
marketing ploys and political shenanigans into adopting poorly-conceived
amendments that came out of a modern convention?
Did the American
Founders Encourage Another Convention? At the close of the 1787 Convention,
after sitting through the arduous debates which resulted in the new
constitution, Benjamin Franklin addressed the delegates, stating: "I doubt
too whether any other Convention we can obtain, may be able to make a better
Constitution."
In a letter to George
Thurberville dated November 2, 1788, James Madison expressed his concern if
another convention should be held, writing: "If a General Convention were to take
place for the avowed and sole purpose of revising the Constitution, it would
naturally consider itself as having a greater latitude than the Congress
appointed to administer and support as well as to amend the system; it would
consequently give greater agitation to the public mind; an election into it
would be courted by the most violent partisans on both sides; it would probably
consist of the most heterogeneous characters; would be the very focus of that
flame which has already too much heated men of all parties; would no doubt
contain individuals of insidious views, who under the mask of seeking
alterations popular in some parts but inadmissible in other parts of the Union
might have a dangerous opportunity of sapping the very foundations of the
fabric. Under all these circumstances it seems scarcely to be presumable that
the deliberations of the body could be conducted in harmony, or terminate in
the general good. Having witnessed the difficulties and dangers experienced by
the first Convention which assembled under every propitious circumstance, I
should tremble for the result of a Second, meeting in the present temper of
America, and under all the disadvantages I have mentioned."
Proponents of a modern
convention reject this as anything analogous to an Article V convention. They claim Thurberville was simply calling
for a brand new, start-from-scratch convention.
This is false. Without the prior
authorization of the congress, the states, or the people, the Constitution
which resulted from the 1787 Convention established a new standard for
ratification: Nine states (not the standard that was required under the
Articles of
Confederation of all
thirteen states). That new standard of
nine states had been met and exceeded by mid-summer 1788. This Thurberville/Madison communication
occurred in November 1788, months after the new constitution was considered
ratified. Under the newly ratified 1787
Constitution, the only option was to call an Article V convention as defined by
the new constitution.
Also, a careful reading
of the Madison statement will reveal that he specifically said: "revising
[read amending] the Constitution" and ".amend the system". AMEND
the system indicates that he did not interpret Thurberville's position as a
proposal for a "start over" convention, but, rather, as a process
that amended the newly ratified 1787 Constitution. He was against that amendment process even in
1788!
The promoters of a
modern convention argue that the term "General Convention" used by
Madison in his response to Thurberville means something different than the type
of convention which could be called under Article V of the Constitution, that
it means a convention called for the specific purpose of creating a new
constitution. However,
"general" was often used during the founding era as pertaining to the
national government as the general government. If used in that way, the term
applies to any national convention to deal with the national constitution. To examine how the Founding Fathers used the
term, we may examine how Founding Father Noah Webster defined the term in
his1828 American Dictionary, which defines "general" thus:
"Properly, relating to a whole genus or
kind; and hence, relating to a whole class or order. 4. Public; common; relating to or
comprehending the whole community; as the general interest or safety of a
nation."
Regardless of the exact
way he used the term, Madison expresses his concern about how another
convention will overstep its charter, become extremely politicized, and become
dangerous to the nation. If Madison was
concerned about the risks in his day, when all of the Founding Fathers were still
living and able to lend their vast wisdom to a new undertaking, who would be so
foolish to suggest that today we are in a political environment that is better
suited to bring forth more sound doctrines of liberty and proper government?
Does the United States
Congress have a Role Once Two Thirds of the States Apply? Promoters of a modern
convention state that once the required threshold of two thirds of the states
apply for a convention, Congress will simply call a convention without any
further ado or meddling. They advocate
that Congress will have no further say, and that Congress is completely removed
from establishing any of the rules of engagement for the convention. Several things contradict this position:
Article I, Section 10,
clause 3 of the United States Constitution states: "No State shall, without the consent of
Congress . . . enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State . .
." Congress has not given its consent for the states to agree together in
any "Agreement or Compact" regarding the rules of engagement for any
potential convention for changing the Constitution. And they will not. Congress will not delegate or abrogate its
power in this matter. They will not
agree to the states rolling over this constitutionally delegated authority.
Article I, Section 8,
clause 18 of the United States Constitution assures that Congress has the
"necessary and proper" power to carry out its constitutional powers,
and per Article V Congress has the power to call a convention. Certainly, within the power to call, the
Congress will exercise at least the following stipulations: Location of the
Convention, Dates of the Convention, Delegate Allotment Allocated to the States
(likely based upon Electoral College votes, or possibly by population---California
with the largest count, to Wyoming with the smallest count)
Voting Procedures of the
Convention - Protection of the Convention Delegates from Punitive Action Based
upon their Activities/Votes in the Convention (Patterned after U.S.
Constitution Article I, Section 6, clause 1).
The Congress WILL
exercise its prerogative in the matter.
The Constitution does not allow for any another pre-defined
"constitutional work-around" previously concocted by the states. ANY other approach is subversive of the constitutionally
defined process, and is therefore, by definition, unconstitutional.
The bi-partisan
"Think Tank" that consults with Congress in matters such as
constitutional issues is the Congressional Research Service (CRS). In 2012, 2014, and 2016 Congress called upon
the CRS to review the duties which would face Congress in the event two thirds
of the states did apply for a convention.
The CRS wrote three very substantial and substantive white papers on the
matter, and those papers advise Congress of their duties and powers as noted in
points 1 and 2, above. Any scenario in
which Congress will not step up to its delegated power is not conceived.
Are there Different
Types of Constitution Conventions? It has become popular for some advocates of
a convention for the purpose of changing the United States Constitution to
promote the idea that somehow a "Convention of States," or a
"Conference of States" may be called, and they are not really a
Constitution Convention, and therefore are less inherently dangerous than a
convention of another name. This is
false. In addition, it is important to
note that neither of the terms "Convention of States," or
"Conference of States" exists within the United States Constitution,
so neither is a constitutionally-recognized approach to modify the
Constitution. Carefully read Article V
of the United States Constitution to verify that the terms "Convention of
States," and "Conference of States" are not found therein.
Some promote the idea
that something called a "Convention of States," or an "Article V
Convention," or a "Conference of States" is not a Constitution
Convention, and thereby a more satisfactory and less inherently dangerous way
to have a convention to modify the Constitution. Again, this is at least a gross
misunderstanding. Article V sets forth
the means by which a convention is called: two-thirds of the states APPLY and
Congress SHALL CALL a Convention. There
is no "special" category of convention called - only a Convention.
Black's Law Dictionary
is the definitive dictionary for legal terms.
Black's Law Dictionary defines a Constitutional Convention thus: "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."
Those promoting a
so-called "Convention of the States" are seeking to call "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." That is the
definition of a Constitution Convention.
Therefore, by
definition, a convention called through the process noted in Article V of the
United States Constitution IS a CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.
Summary and a Few
Concluding Thoughts - Without attempting to elucidate the HUNDREDS of other
concerns that could be brought to bear regarding the dangerous numerous
potential flaws which could prove fatal to this great nation if a Convention
were to be held at this time of national political debauchery, perhaps I may
offer a summary of a few thoughts of final truths worthy of honest
consideration:
In his magnificent
"Farewell Address," George Washington counseled: "If in the
opinion of the people the distribution or modification of the constitutional
powers be in any particular wrong, let it be corrected by an amendment in the
way which the Constitution designates.
But let there be no change by usurpation, for though this in one
instance may be the instrument of good, it is the customary weapon by which
free governments are destroyed."
The American Founders
NEVER advocated a Constitution Convention if the Constitution were being
VIOLATED, they only advocated it if it were WRONG. THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH THE
CONSTITUTION. WE HAVE SIMPLY STOPPED
ABIDING BY IT. ALL of the woes facing
the nation which are trumpeted by modern convention advocates as problems
demanding solutions that (they say) are only possible by changing the
Constitution are a result of the fact that we are ignoring the plain English
words of the Constitution and are usurping power not delegated. The problem is the very thing Washington
warned against: USURPATION. All of the
egregious burdens and problems which are currently heaped upon the nation would
be resolved if we returned to the plain English words of the Constitution and
vigorously and unerringly applied them.
No one (including the
most ardent advocates of a convention) can really be certain the arguments made
by modern advocates of a convention will hold water and be absolutely
safe. We have OPINIONS of prominent
legal minds on both sides of the argument, but once the process is started
rolling, there is no way to call it back.
On September 13, 1994, W. Cleon Skousen wrote the following to Phyllis
Schlafly: "...you were undoubtedly right in sensing a great danger if we
tried to apply Article V of the Constitution during a period of the most
depraved political corruption in the entire history of our country." Are we so foolish as to assume that today's
environment is less acrimonious, divisive, and politically dangerous than 1994?
There is much evidence
that the Convention of 1787 took a much more dramatic step than many
anticipated they would in writing an entirely new constitution when they
met. Fortunately, those who gathered in
Philadelphia in 1787 were honorable men who loved liberty and understood the
great Americanist principles of individual God-given rights, that the purpose
of government was to preserve those rights, that powers must be limited and
enumerated, and that they must be checked and balanced and divided and
subdivided if tyranny was to be prevented.
The men of 1787 were uniquely suited to bring forth the magnificent work
they established. And in numerous ways
they recognized that the inspiration of God had been upon them as they sat and
deliberated the magnificent precepts they incorporated into the United States
Constitution.
Statesmen of the caliber
of the American Founders are exceptionally rare today, and individuals of
infinitely lesser caliber and character and understanding of the eternal
principles of liberty will almost assuredly sit in any modern constitutional
convention, with infinitely less desirable outcome! Where in all the world today may we find even
one or two statesmen of the character and understanding exhibited by George
Washington, Benjamin Franklin, George Mason, James Wilson, James Madison, and
the others who, under the inspiration of God, framed our marvelous Charter of
Liberty: The United States Constitution?
We will search the world in vain for such individuals. Who, today, will sit in the seats occupied by
those who brought forth the Constitution of 1787? NONE I would trust!
Are you willing to risk
our Constitution based upon somebody's opinion that they are right? There is no reason to approach this issue
with what may become a "pull it up by the roots" approach. There are sound constitutional solutions for
all of the challenges this nation faces, and none of them require the potential
loss of the Constitution.
The solution is a return
to the constraints of power on the federal government which exist within the
United States Constitution. The problem is not with the Constitution. The
Constitution is not flawed. It does not need to be changed. The problem is that
we have stopped applying the Constitution. We do not have to amend the
Constitution to solve this problem, and we do not have to risk a convention to
bring things back into proper order. The solution is to begin again to abide
within the constraints so carefully defined within the plain English words of
the United States Constitution. James Madison stated that the powers of the
national government were "few and well defined." Perhaps, when the
people of the nation again understand that fact, the nation's leadership will
be compelled to abide by their oath to uphold the Constitution of the United
States.
The solution to the
concerns promoted by advocates of a constitution convention are found not by
applying Article V, but by applying Article VI of the Constitution. Article VI requires all who hold office to
"be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this [the United States]
Constitution." Let us work
diligently to restore and apply the sound principles embodied in the United
States Constitution, and make them popular again. Please join with me in our effort to restore
the understanding and application of our magnificent Constitution - a good
government with few and well defined enumerated powers that are checked and
balanced to prevent tyranny. We, the people, are responsible to do this, and we
can.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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