Constitutional Convention?
Adam Kotsko asks"If you were presented with the opportunity to vote on holding a new constitutional convention with the potential to dissolve the union, would you vote yes or no?"
Most of the people who have responded so far have been negative, but more about the idea of dissolving the union rather than the constitutional convention process itself. My response was:
The Constitution is a fantastic document, but it is not perfect. Some of its finest features had to be jerry-rigged in through early amendments, and some of the original language is deeply troubling and irrelevant.Then I wondered. Why is Kotsko asking? How much of"A Hypothetical" is this question?
A Constitutional convention might have the potential to dissolve the union, but it also might have the potential to allow us to redefine ourselves and refine our political processes in creative ways.
Take the Electoral College.... please!
My students and I were talking about it, and I pointed out to them that the current system would need to be reformed by those people who benefit from the current system, so it would take extraordinary pressure to produce real change using our normal constitutional process. But a convention would be unbounded by such rules.
Yes, it invites chaos. But it also might be our best hope to renew and revitalize our flagging democratic spirit.
I'm having some trouble finding a definitive answer. I vaguely recall hearing, reading, something which said that we're only a few states away from calling a full-bore Article 5 convention, but it's not something which comes up too often.... A bit of googling and I found this lesson plan from the Constitutional Rights Foundation, which claims that we are only two states away from exceeding the 2/3rds threshold for a convention.
I can't find any other credible sources, or a list of ratifying states. CRF says that the issue with the most states on board right now is a balanced budget amendment, but once a convention is called it isn't clear that it would be limited to that issue, which is what makes everyone so nervous about the prospect. I'm actually not entirely sure, based on Article 5, that dissolving the union is among the powers of the convention, which makes the original question kind of suspect. Anyone know more?
Speaking of the State of the Union, David Beito takes a comment by Ralph Luker on the similarity of voting geography between this election and the 1896 McKinley-Bryan contest, and posts the maps. How have we held the country together this long? If we're really ready to give up, Roderick Long has tips and resources for secession movements. Kevin Drum thinks that's about right, posting the 1860 electoral map for comparison.
A Modest Proposal: Another Damned Medievalist finally convinced me to register with Blogger so I could post a comment on this political proposal. Much of it is pretty moderate (which is why I think it would be a great idea) but her last two bullet-points would radically alter politics and policy as we know it:
- all military action expected to last more than one week must be ratified by the Senate
- No bill shall pass through Congress that has more than one topic; sub-topics must relate directly to the letter AND spirit of the main topic.