professor
Lawrence Lessig has called for a
Second Constitutional Convention of the United States. Every state except
Hawaii has applied for an Article V Convention at one time or another. The majority of such applications were made in the 20th century. Before any official count had been taken, one private count puts the total number of applications at over 700. Even though the Article V Convention process has never been used to amend the Constitution, the number of states applying for a convention has nearly reached the required threshold several times. Congress has proposed amendments to the Constitution on some occasions, at least in part, because of the threat of an Article V Convention. Rather than risk such a convention taking control of the amendment process away from it, Congress acted pre-emptively to propose the amendments instead.
The Bill of Rights, which includes the first ten amendments, as well as the
Twenty-seventh Amendment, were proposed in part because of a Convention application by the New York and Virginia legislatures at the suggestion of a letter from the New York State Convention to ratify the Constitution. The convention would have been limited to those changes discussed at the various State ratifying Conventions. At least four other amendments (the
Seventeenth,
Twenty-First,
Twenty-Second, and
Twenty-Fifth Amendments) have been identified as being proposed by Congress at least partly in response to the threat of an Article V convention, bringing the total to 15 out of 27, a majority of the Amendments.
Direct election of Senators In the late 1890s, the House of Representatives passed multiple resolutions for a constitutional amendment providing for direct election of senators. The Senate refused to consider those resolutions. In 1893, Nebraska filed the first Article V application for direct election of senators. By 1911, 29 states had Article V convention applications on file for an amendment providing for direct election of senators, just two short of the 31-state threshold. As new states were being added the threshold increased, however those States had already passed resolutions supporting such a Convention. The final count is somewhat uncertain, but when either just one or two further states were required, the Senate finally conceded and passed its version of an amendment in May 1911, which was then approved by the House in 1912 and submitted to the states.
World federal government In 1949, six states — California, Connecticut, Florida, Maine, New Jersey, and North Carolina — applied for a convention to propose an amendment "to enable the participation of the United States in a world federal government." Multiple other state legislatures introduced or debated the same proposal. These resolutions were part of an effort at the time to integrate the United States into a potential world government.
Congressional apportionment There have been two nearly successful attempts to amend the Constitution via an Article V Convention since the late 1960s. The first try was an attempt to propose an amendment that would overturn two Supreme Court decisions,
Wesberry v. Sanders and
Reynolds v. Sims, decisions that required states to adhere to the
one man, one vote principle in drawing electoral districts for state and federal elections. The attempt fell only one state short of reaching the 34 needed to force Congress to call a convention in 1969, but ended by the death of its main promoter Senator
Everett Dirksen. After this peak, several states (whose legislatures by this point had been re-engineered in the wake of the rulings) rescinded their applications, and interest in the proposed amendment subsided.
Balanced budget In response to increasing federal deficits, a movement in the 1970s by the states to impose fiscal discipline on the federal government began. Between 1975 and 1979, thirty states petitioned Congress for a convention to write a
balanced budget amendment. By 1983, the number of applications had reached 32, only two states short of the 34 needed to force such a convention. In addition, at least four states (California, Illinois, Kentucky, and Montana) had adopted resolutions requesting that Congress propose a deficit spending amendment. Enthusiasm for the amendment subsided in response to fears that an Article V Convention could not be limited to a single subject (the act was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1986 but Congress enacted a reworked version of the law in 1987). By 1988, two states (Alabama and Florida) had rescinded their applications on the topic of a federal balanced budget amendment. On March 26, 2014, the
Michigan Legislature applied to Congress for a convention to propose a balanced budget amendment, making Michigan the 22nd to participate in the national effort. On April 27, 2016, the Oklahoma Senate approved an Article V convention on a balanced budget amendment, making Oklahoma the 29th state to participate in the national effort. On November 7, 2017, the Wisconsin Legislature approved an Article V convention resolution for a balanced budget amendment.
Campaign finance A
political action committee called
Wolf-PAC emerged from New York's
Occupy Wall Street movement in October 2011. Wolf-PAC calls for a convention of states in order to propose a constitutional amendment that addresses the issue of campaign finance. The resolution reads
"Corporations are not people. They have none of the Constitutional rights of human beings. Corporations are not allowed to give money to any politician, directly or indirectly. No politician can raise over $100 from any person or entity. All elections must be publicly financed." , Wolf-PAC's application had been adopted in three states: California and Vermont in 2014; and Rhode Island in 2016. New Jersey and Illinois previously adopted the application in 2014, but rescinded it in 2021 and 2022, respectively.
Convention of States Project The
conservative group
Citizens for Self-Governance (CSG) is engaged in an ongoing effort to call an Article V Convention. Through its "Convention of States Project", CSG is seeking "to urge and empower state legislators to call a convention of states." CSG states that it initiated the Convention of States project "for the purpose of stopping the runaway power of the federal government."
Mark Levin has supported CSG's efforts to a call a convention for the purpose of proposing amendments to the constitution. In December 2015,
Marco Rubio endorsed CSG's efforts to a call an Article V Convention. In January 2016, Texas Governor
Greg Abbott called for a Convention of States to restrict the power of the federal government. In June 2017, former U.S. Senator and former
Heritage Foundation president
Jim DeMint announced his role as a senior adviser for the Convention of States project. In September 2016, CSG held a simulated convention to propose amendments to the United States Constitution in
Williamsburg, Virginia. An assembly of 137 delegates representing every state gathered to conduct a simulated convention. The simulated convention passed amendments relating to six topics, including requiring the states to approve any increase in the
national debt, imposing
term limits, restricting the scope of the
Commerce Clause, limiting the power of federal regulations, requiring a
supermajority to impose federal taxes and repealing the
16th Amendment, and giving the states the power to abrogate any federal law, regulation, or executive order. In August 2023, CSG held a simulated Article V convention in Williamsburg. , CSG's application for a Convention of States had been passed in 20 states. Forty-one state constitutions have a
single subject provision but this provision is not in the United States Constitution. In April 2014, Florida became the first state to make an application for an Article V Convention to constitutionally prohibit
unrelated riders in Congress.
Aggregation strategy Some Article V convention proponents have proposed aggregating unrelated applications, including aggregating plenary convention and balanced budget applications, to reach the 34-state threshold necessary to call a convention. In 2021–2022, resolutions advocating for such an approach were introduced in Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Utah. Additionally, legislation was introduced in the
117th Congress to convene a convention by aggregating state applications. An alternative proposal is to amend the constitution to allow the states to ratify amendments asynchronously, of their own initiative. According to Common Cause, 28 states have called for a convention in aggregate, which means that only six additional states would trigger a convention.
Gun control On June 8, 2023,
Gavin Newsom proposed a 28th amendment to the constitution to address gun control, specifically by raising the minimum age to purchase firearms to 21, instituting universal background checks for firearm purchases, requiring mandatory waiting periods, and banning assault weapons. He proposed having an Article V convention to address this amendment. In September, the
California State Legislature formally applied for an Article V convention proposing such an amendment.
Term limits Since 2016,
U.S. Term Limits has called for an Article V Convention with the limited purpose of imposing term limits on
Congress. Resolutions calling for such a convention have been passed by the state legislatures of Florida, Alabama, Missouri, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. == See also ==