CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE DANGEROUS CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION MEASURE”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE DANGEROUS CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION MEASURE”
The
California ballot has seen plenty of dangerous propositions over the years, and
yet another one may face voters wherever they cast votes next November.
Fortunately,
virtually all such questionable proposals have been beaten at the polls or
struck down by courts if voters acted irresponsibly. There was the AIDS
quarantine measure put forward by crackpot presidential candidate Lyndon
LaRouche in 1986, which aimed to place everyone with the disease in remote
detention camps. Would Ervin “Magic” Johnson be part owner of the Los Angeles
Dodgers and president of the Lakers today if that one had passed?
There
was the 1994 Proposition 187, which sought to deprive undocumented immigrants
of health care, schooling and anything else its sponsors could think of. That
one passed handily, endorsed by then-Gov. Pete Wilson, but was swiftly struck
down by a federal judge. And so on.
Now
comes a danger of a different sort, embodied in a seemingly innocuous measure
that’s about to begin circulating with hopes of getting a yes-or-no vote just
over a year from now.
It’s
titled “The California Call for a Constitutional Convention,” and it contains
some fine ideas, including calls for Constitutional amendments to ensure equal
pay for equal work and limit corporate “personhood” to invalidate the U.S.
Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. The initiative also calls for
California to participate in a constitutional convention to push for creating a
peaceful way for states to secede from the Union and/or negotiate treaties with
foreign countries, and has a provision demanding that federal funding be
distributed to states in proportion to what their taxpayers put into the
federal kitty.
Most
of those aims are laudable, but there’s absolutely nothing to guarantee that
any of these ideas would attain reality if this measure passes. Rather, there’s
the definite possibility for major alteration to the Bill of Rights, which now
protects things like free speech, freedom of the press, freedom of association
and guarantees there will be no official state religion.
How
could this happen when the convention call includes very specific subjects to
be taken up and none involves the Bill of Rights? Easy. Once you begin a
constitutional convention, the delegates can take it where they like.
That’s
one reason why even though many states have officially called for a convention
to enshrine a balanced-budget amendment, that call has never gotten support
from three-quarters of the states, as required to get a convention started.
There’s
also little chance that even if California calls for a convention to take up
its plentiful legitimate grievances, it will get the needed support from other
states.
The
sponsors of the new initiative, which goes by the abbreviated term CalConCon,
in effect concede this. They maintain on their website (www.calconcon.com) that any convention
call ever issued by a state – even 100 years ago or more – can be included in
the total needed now.
That’s
because just as the Constitution sets no limit on where delegates can take a
convention, it also has no expiration date for convention calls, which now
number 27. It’s an unfortunate omission by the Founding Fathers, who turn out
to be fallible after all.
Marcus
Ruiz Evans of Fresno, whose 2012 book California’s Next Century called
for semi-sovereign status for the state and essentially began the Calexit
secession movement that spawned this convention initiative, maintains there
would be no “runaway convention.”
But
the campaign website notes that “the U.S. Constitution makes no mention of
rescinding an application (for a convention) or limiting (it) to a single
subject…”
Still,
says Ruiz, many academics have forecast a runaway convention would not happen.
But how does anyone know where activists from Texas or Montana might take the
meeting? Or whether there would be neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klansmen among the
voting delegates?
It’s
true California several years ago called for a constitutional convention to get
rid of the Citizens United decision. Fortunately, in part because of the
dangers involved, no such meeting occurred.
Is
it really worth risking free speech and freedom of religion or the right to
bear arms for the unlikely possibility of winning the right to secede
peacefully?
The
only rational conclusion is that sponsors of this measure are being
shortsighted, concerned more for their immediate goals than about making sure
Americans’ fundamental rights remain untouched.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
No comments:
Post a Comment