But the real problem comes from this statement in Newsom’s announcement; note the italics I added:
“Six years after the ratification of the Articles of Confederation, which established the first national government, a majority of Delegates to Congress agreed that the Articles needed significant revisions. On February 21, 1787, the Congress resolved that ‘a convention of delegates ... appointed by the several states be held at Philadelphia for the sole and express purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation.’”
But instead of “revising,” the delegates produced an entirely new document, the Constitution of the United States of America, later ratified by the states.
A 28th Amendment Convention likely could do the same—passing a 29th Amendment, a 30th Amendment, all the way to an Nth Amendment. Or it could imitate the delegates of 1787 and write an entirely new Constitution.
Pro-Life Convention
I remember when a Constitutional Convention was talked about on a large scale after the Roe v. Wade decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973 overturned all state abortion laws—even the liberal ones—and imposed abortion on demand everywhere. That was overturned with last year’s Dobbs decision.This took 49 years, because—although Republican presidents kept promising to appoint pro-life justices to the U.S. Supreme Court—too often we got such pro-aborts as Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy.
Runaway Convention Concerns
At the time, President Jimmy Carter warned of a convention for a balanced-budget amendment:“I think the convening of a Constitutional Convention to pass such an amendment would be very ill-advised and contrary to the best interest of our country. It would be a radical departure from the historic procedures that we have always used to amend our Constitution and might result in unlimited amendments which would change the basic thrust, the philosophy and the structure of our government.”
And the research article noted:
“Carter’s statement echoes the concerns of a number of constitutional scholars, members of Congress and others about what would happen if a constitutional convention were called. Because there are no established procedures for calling and running a convention, some fear that a convention, once called, would move beyond the specific subject of the proposed amendment and make broad revisions in the nation’s constitution. ‘There is no assurance that [a constitutional convention] would not be a runaway,’ Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee’s Civil and Constitutional Rights Subcommittee, said recently. ‘We’ve had only one constitutional convention and it tore up the Articles of Confederation.’”
However, others said a Constitutional Convention could be limited:
“That fear is not shared by a special constitutional convention study committee set up six years ago by the American Bar Association (ABA). The committee’s report, which was adopted by the ABA in August 1973, said the convention method of proposing amendments could be ‘an orderly mechanism of effecting constitutional change when circumstances require its use.’ Others have pointed out that the work of constitutional conventions—including a ‘runaway’ session—still would require ratification by three-fourths of the states. ...
Conclusion: Newsom Grandstanding
Given a Constitutional Convention is highly unlikely, this question of limiting a convention will remain unresolved. But Newsom’s lack of care on the point shows this isn’t a realistic proposal. He’s just doing it to gain points for a potential presidential run in 2028. Or, possibly, in 2024, as President Biden’s every stumble generates more conjecture that he might cancel his re-election bid.The national news on his 28th Amendment shows Newsom is garnering the national attention he’s been seeking. Get ready for many more ideas that, even if they’re unrealistic, keep his name out there among the Democratic primary voters he’s courting.