Weekly Opinion Editorial
ARTICLE 5 STILL BAD IDEA!
by Steve Fair
The U.S.
Constitution allows for amendments in two ways: (1) a 2/3 approval by both
Houses of Congress and ratification by ¾ of the states or (2) a convention
called by 2/3 of states (34 of the 50) and amendments then ratified by ¾ of the
states (38 of the 50). An Article 5
convention has never been used to amend the founding document. All twenty-seven (27) amendments to the
Constitution have been proposed by Congress and ratified by the states.
In 2015,
Citizens for Self-Governance launched a nationwide effort to call for an Article
5 convention. As of 2024, 19 states,
including Oklahoma, have agreed to participate in a Convention of States. Fifteen more states need to agree to
participate before the Article 5 convention is a reality. The Article 5 is currently being debated and
considered in Idaho and Ohio’s legislatures.
The
Convention of States has proponents and opponents on both ends of the political
spectrum. Liberals and conservatives
fear the possibility of a ‘runaway’ convention and the current document being
scraped and a runaway convention resulting.
The late
U.S. Senator Dr. Tom Coburn, (R-OK) supported an Article 5. He 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[S1] is why he put Article V in the Constitution. 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.” Coburn’s
lobbying of the Oklahoma state legislature in 2017 resulted in passage of SJR3 and
the Sooner state became the 7th state in the country to call for an
Article 5. Three observations:
First, Coburn’s
observations about government were/are correct.
The government is too big and unwieldy.
The government spends too much money and career elected officials often
spend decades in politics. Term limits
and a balanced budget amendment would fundamentally change America. Even when Republicans control government, the
national debt continues to climb and term limit legislation is ignored. Those two issues are addressed only when it’s
primary campaign season.
Second, there
is no way to know what would happen at a Convention of the States. No radio host, former elected official, Constitutional
lawyer, oracle or soothsayer can definitively know what would happen at an Article
5 convention. There are differing
opinions and educated guesses, but since it has never been used to amend, it remains
a mystery what might happen. If an Article
5 did spiral out of control, it could destroy America. If it worked, it could save America. The issue is there is no guarantee only term
limits and a balanced budget amendment would be the only issues considered. The convention itself would control the
agenda, not Congress or the states. A runaway
convention is a risk America should not be willing to take.
Third, desperate
times require rational action. Desperate
times don’t require desperate measures.
That is irrational. Level headed
thinking is critical in times of chaos. Throwing
the baby out with the bath water is not wise.
Recognizing the risks of a Convention of States is not trepidation or fear-
it’s reasonable and sensible.
Nine years ago, I wrote an op/ed titled, “Article 5 Convention is a Bad Idea.” You can read it here: https://stevefair.blogspot.com/2015/02/article-five-convention-is-bad-idea.html The column triggered a series of opposing editorials written by then Senator Coburn. We engaged in a months’ long back and forth op/ed battle supporting our opposing positions on an Article 5. Dr. Coburn told me I would eventually come to support the idea of an Article 5. Perhaps he was right, but not yet. Nine years later, an Article 5 convention remains a bad idea.
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