Weekly Opinion Editorial
ARTICLE FIVE CONVENTION
IS A BAD IDEA!
by Steve
Fair
Article Five of the U.S. Constitution describes
the process the Constitution may be amended. There are two ways- first, by a
supermajority of Congress and second, by two thirds (34) of the states calling
for an Article Five convention. The U.S.
Constitution has never been amended by a state called convention. All seventeen amendments to the founding
document were done through the legislative process and then ratified by the
states.
Some well-known conservatives are calling
for an Article Five constitutional convention for the purpose of dealing with
two issues, a balanced budget amendment and term limits. Former Oklahoma U.S. Senator Tom Coburn is on
board for an Article Five convention. He
recently said, “I think [George] Mason was prophetic that we would devolve to where the
federal government became too powerful, too big and too unwieldy. That’s why he
put Article V in. I think we ought to
have a balanced budget amendment, I think we ought to have term limits. I think
we ought to put a chokehold on regulation and re-establish the powers of the
Congress,” Other prominent conservatives supporting an Article Five
convention are Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, David Barton, Rick
Green and Glenn Beck. Conservative
groups opposing an Article Five include Eagle Forum (Phyllis Schalfly) and the
John Birch Society.
It remains unclear if the 34 state
threshold has been reached, but for sure it is close. On January 6th, very quietly, the
U.S. House passed a rule starting an official process for tabulating the state
applications for an Article Five convention.
The action wasn’t widely reported by the media, but the counting has
begun.
Here in Oklahoma,
State Representative Gary Banz, (R-Midwest
City) has presented bills to have Oklahoma support an
Article Five convention the last two sessions. They have been defeated
because of hard work from grassroots activists within the GOP. Here are three
reasons to oppose an Article Five convention:
First, George Soros supports it. That’s right- all those prominent
conservatives and a very prominent liberal support an Article Five. And he is not the only liberal that supports
it. Soros understands the convention would likely
spiral out of control and deal with a lot more issues than just ones conservatives
want to deal with. On their website,
WolfPac, a Soros funded organization, writes they would like to have a
convention so they can achieve, ‘their ultimate goal,’ which is to pass an amendment ending
corporate personhood and ‘publicly’ financing all elections in the U.S. That is socialism, pure and simple. When
liberals like Soros are on board with an idea, conservatives should be especially
leery.
Secondly and most importantly, how will
the delegates to an Article Five be apportioned? Will each state get one vote like in 1787 in Philadelphia or will it
be according to population? There is no
provision in Article Five outlining the process, so if Congress is making the
rules, it will likely be done by population.
That means the more populous areas of the US, which are more liberal, will
control the convention and that is no good for conservatives.
Third, there is no guarantee only term
limits and the balanced budget amendment would be the only issues considered. The convention itself would control the agenda,
not Congress or the states. If the
apportionment is done by population, then other issues and amendments could be
offered. The result would be a runaway
convention.
There are solid principled conservatives
on both sides of the Article Five issue.
I have many friends who support an Article Five convention and the only places
we disagree are where they are wrong! An
Article Five convention is not the answer.
Convening an untried, unproven constitutional convention in today’s
modern times is just too risky. The real
answer is for the citizens of the U.S. to take equity in their
government and put sufficient pressure on their federal representatives to do
the right thing and pass the amendments with a 2/3 majority in Congress and
then lobby to have ratified in their state.
If those promoting an Article Five had spent as much time and energy
educating the general public on the current state of affairs as they have spent
on promoting a never before tired method, perhaps Congress would have already
done the right thing. An Article Five
convention is a bad idea! Contact your
Oklahoma state representative and state senator and tell them to oppose any proposal for
Oklahoma to
call for an Article Five convention.
We need a Constitutional Convention to increase the power of individual citizens and reduce the power of Washington politicians. This is an important opportunity for amendments related to term limits, states' rights and a balanced budget.
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