It was a super-annoying read. The info was all over the place. And the fucking New York Times made the lede the final paragraphs. Basically - if the republicans want to have one - I’m sure they’ll be able to. The constitution is a vague mess on this. The article doesn’t mention the supreme court. But I’m certain nearly everything the republicans want to do will be declared constitutional by the wackadoodle GOP SCOTUS justices.
- 34 states to have a convention
- 38 states to approve any constitutional amendment.
A Constitutional Convention? Some Democrats Fear It’s Coming.
The 1787 gathering in Philadelphia to write the Constitution was the one and only time state representatives have convened to work on the document. […] A simple line in the Constitution allows Congress to convene a rewrite session if two-thirds of state legislatures [34 out of 50] have called for one. The option has never been used, but most states have long-forgotten requests on the books that could be enough to trigger a new constitutional convention, some scholars and politicians believe.
[…]
More than 34 states appear to have standing requests to change the Constitution, some dating back more than 150 years. […] 38 states would have to approve any constitutional amendment.
[…]
By the count of David Super, a professor at the Georgetown University Law Center and an expert on constitutional conventions, the highest number of active requests for a convention on one specific topic is 28, for a balanced budget. But, he said, if Article V is interpreted as allowing any request to count toward convening a constitutional convention, the 34-state threshold has already been reached.
“If Congress declares under whatever crazy counting theory the convention advocates support that we’ve met the threshold, then we’ll have a convention,” Mr. Super said.
Huge gap for the left not to have an aspirational constitution drafted and floating around out there as a meme. We can’t even say, “hey, look there’s a better way! We took the best bits of all the constitutions in the world, and if we updated things, it could guarantee you x, y, and z.”
No chance of it being enacted of course, but how can we say a better world is possible when we can’t even come up with a rough draft of what it might look like?
That’s actually a really good idea. Maybe the good folks at would be willing to draft one up