Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
1NC
1NC
Text: The appropriate number of the fifty states will invoke
their power under Article V of the Constitution to call a limited
constitutional convention for the purpose of [plan]. A sufficient
number of the fifty states will ratify the amendment.
CP solves the AFF and avoids the DA
Vermeule 4 (Adrian Professor of Law at the University of Chicago, Constitutional
Amendments and the Constitutional Common Law, University of Chicago Public
Law & Legal Theory Working Paper No. 73, 2004,
http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?
article=1072&context=public_law_and_legal_theory)
These points, however, capture only one side of the ledger. Precedent, and the constraint that new
decisions be related analogically to old decisions , effect a partial transfer of
authority from todays judges to yesterdays judges . As against claims of ancestral wisdom, Bentham
emphasized that prior generations necessarily possess less information than current generations. If the problem is that changing
circumstances make constitutional updating necessary, it is not obvious why it is good that current judges should be bound either by
interpretation in the judicial setting is that the order in which decisions arise is an important constraint on the decisions that may be
made. Judges who would, acting on a blank slate, choose the constitutional rule that is best for the polity in the changed
circumstances, may be barred from reaching the rule, even though they would have reached it had the cases arisen in a different
order. Precedent has the effect of making some optimal rules inaccessible to current decisionmakers. When technological change
threatened to render the rigid trimester framework of Roe v. Wade obsolete, the Supreme Court faced the prospect, in Pennsylvania
v. Casey, that precedent would block a decision revising constitutional abortion law in appropriate ways, even though a decisive
fraction of the Justices would have chosen the revised rule in a case of first impression.78 The joint opinion in Casey resorted to
intellectual dishonesty, proclaiming adherence to precedent while discarding the trimester framework that previous cases has taken
to be the core of Roes holding.79 The lesson of Casey is sometimes taken to be that precedent imposes no real constraint, but
absent precedent the Justices would have had no need to write a mendacious, and widely ridiculed, opinion. The institutions that
participate in the process of formal amendment, principally federal and state legislatures, are not subject to these pathologies.
revealed in his interview with Brian Williams - transcript & audio @3:18). That is most certainly the tip of the iceberg. The vast
amount of data collected and stored by the NSA is estimated to reach 966 Exabytes (0.966x10^12 Gigabytes or almost 200 times
greater than Eric Schmidts, former Google CEO, estimated sum of all human knowledge up to 2003 - 5 Exabytes) a year by 2015
arguing in defense of merchants in Salam & Boston, MA in 1761 against General Writs of Assistance (General Warrants issued by
officers or their deputies) against the Crown, and in his spirited defense, as notated by John Adams, he states: I was desired by one
of the Court to look into the books, and consider the question now before them concerning the Writs of AssistanceIt appears to me
the worst instrument of arbitrary power, the most destructive of English liberty and the fundamental principles of law, that ever was
found in an English law book Your Honours will find in the old books concerning the office of a Justice of the Peace, precedents of
general warrants to search suspected houses. But in more modern books, you will find only special warrants to search such and such
houses, specially named, in which the complainant has before sworn that he suspects his goods are concealed; and will find it
adjudged that special warrants only are legal. In the same manner I rely on it, that the writ prayed for in this petition, being general
is illegal. It is a power that places the liberty of every man in the hands of every petty officer. I say I admit that special writs of
assistance, to search special places, may be granted to certain persons on oath; but I deny that the writ now prayed for can be
granted, for I beg leave to make some observations on the writ itselfIn the first place, the writ is universal, being directed 'to all
and singular Justices, Sheriffs, Constables, and all other officers and subjects;' so that, in short, it is directed to every subject in the
King's dominions. Every one with this writ may be a tyrant in a legal manner, also may control, imprison, or murder any one within
the realm. In the next place, it is perpetual, there is no return. A man is accountable to no person for his doings. Every man may
reign secure in his petty tyranny, and spread terror and desolation around him, until the trump of the archangel shall excite different
emotions in his soul. In the third place, a person with this writ, in the day time, may enter all houses, shops, &c. [etc.] at will, and
command all to assist him. Fourthly, by this writ, not only deputies, &c. but even their menial servants, are allowed to lord it over us.
What is this but to have the curse of Canaan with a witness on us; to be the servant of servants, the most despicable of God's
creation? Now one of the most essential branches of English liberty is the freedom of one's house. A man's house is his castle; and
whilst he is quiet, he is as well guarded as a prince in his castle. This writ, if it should be declared legal, would totally annihilate this
privilege. Custom-house officers may enter our houses when they please; we are commanded to permit their entry. Their menial
servants may enter, may break locks, bars, and every thing in their way; and whether they break through malice or revenge, no
man, no court, can inquire. Bare suspicion without oath is sufficient. This wanton exercise of this power is not a chimerical
raided and agents had taken her private documents documents that were not listed on the search warrant. In August 2013,
the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Special Operations Division (SOD), which is
made up of two dozen partner agenciesincluding the FBI, CIA, NSA, Internal Revenue
Service and the Department of Homeland Security, is funneling information from intelligence
intercepts, wiretaps, informants and a massive database of telephone records to
authorities across the nation to help them launch criminal investigations of
Americans. In January 2014, it was revealed that the, relatively, newly created Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (CFPB) is conducting a massive, NSA-esque data-mining project
collecting account information on an estimated 991 million American credit card
accounts.[and] that CFPB officials are working with the Federal Housing Finance Agency on a second data-mining effort, this
Reuters learned that
one focused on the 53 million residential mortgages taken out by Americans since 1998. In August 2014 The Intercept obtained
documents showing that the NSA built its own secret Google called ICREACH. ICREACH has been accessible to more than 1,000
analysts at 23 U.S. government agencies that perform intelligence work, according to a 2010 memo. A planning document from
2007 lists the DEA, FBI, Central Intelligence Agency, and the Defense Intelligence Agency as core members. Information shared
through ICREACH can be used to track peoples movements, map out their networks of associates, help predict future actions, and
potentially reveal religious affiliations or political beliefs. Couple all of the above with what Edward Snowden pointed out just in
relation to innocuous Web searches and what the information allows an agency to conclude: Are you doing something, are you
someplace you shouldn't be, according to the government, which is arbitrary, you know are you engaged in any kind of activities
that we disapprove of, even if they aren't technically illegal? And all of these things can raise your level of scrutiny, even if it seems
entirely innocent to you. Even if you have nothing to hide. Even if you're doing nothing wrong. These activities can be misconstrued,
misinterpreted, and used to harm you as an individual, even without the government having any intent to do you wrong. The
house, papers, and effects? It is impossible to devise a more outrageous and unlimited instrument of tyranny than this proposed
writ: and it cannot be wondered at, that such an alarm should have been created, when it is considered to what enormous abuses
such a process might have led (Remarks about Otis speech, as published by William Tudor in 1823, James Otiss speech on Writs of
assistance, Parker P. Simmons, 1906, p.16). The Solution: As James Otis asserted in his fiery arguments against Writs of Assistance
(General Warrants), in 1761, Every man, merely natural, was an independent sovereign, subject to no law, but the law written on
his heart, and revealed to him by his Maker, in the constitution of his nature, and the inspiration of his understanding and his
conscience. His right to his life, his liberty, no created being could rightfully contest. Nor was his right to his property less
incontestible...He asserted that these rights were inherent and inalienable. That they never could be surrendered or alienated.
However, tyranny abounds, attempting to separate, surrender, and alienate our inherent and inalienable rights; in the face of so
States to pass an application (resolution) calling for an Amending Convention. In 2014, three States (GA, AK, & FL) successfully
passed an application calling for an Amending Convention for the sole purpose of limiting the size, scope, and jurisdiction of the
Federal Government. Now, we have this second mode of amending the Constitution, because two days prior to the end of the
Constitutional Convention George Mason (from James Madisons notes): "thought the plan of amending the Constitution
exceptionable & dangerous. As the proposing of amendments is in both the modes to depend, in the first immediately, and in the
second, ultimately, on Congress, no amendments of the proper kind would ever be obtained by the people, if the Government
should become oppressive, as he verily believed would be the case." And so, the adopted version of Article V included the method of
using the State Legislatures to propose amendments, for a tyrannical government would never restrain its own power.
Net Benefits
point is that (ii) is rankly speculative as well. It is hard to know about any of this in the abstract; but we cannot
simply assume (ii), in the faith that a world without (nonjudicial) amendments is the best of all possible worlds to
inhabit.
Legitimacy DALink
Court action undermines legitimacy
Lasser 1988(William, Professor of Political Science at Clemson, The Limits of
Judicial Power: The Supreme Court in American Politics, P. 246)
An institution apparently so weak and so dependent on conformity to the popular
will had to move with great care and circumspection, at least in extreme cases. If
the justices tried to impose their will on an unwilling public, they were doomed to
failure or worse. "Surely the record teaches that no useful purpose is served when
the justices seek the hottest political cauldrons of the moment and dive into the
middle of them," McCloskey counseled. "Nor is there much to be said for the idea that a
judicial policy of fiat and uncompromising negation will halt a truly dominant
political impulse." Instead, the justices had to learn history's compelling lesson: "The Court's greatest
successes have been achieved when it has operated near the margins rather than
at the center of political controversy, when it has nudged and gently tugged the nation, instead of
trying to rule it." After two hundred years of struggling to establish itself as a vital force in American politics,
McCloskey concluded, "it would be a pity if the judges . . . should now once more forget the limits that its own
history so compellingly prescribes."
the place of the Morgan power in the dialogue between the Court
and its constituents should be plain. I earlier outlined the ideal of symbiotic progress, in which the
Congress and the Supreme Court take turns leading the way toward a better future. An exercise of the
Morgan power may fit into that progression in a special way, as the Congress's most
effective tool for expressing its strong disapproval of a judicial decision accepting [*857]
or rejecting a claim of fundamental right without risking the Court's legitimacy, hence the
Constitution's, hence ultimately its own.
If all of this is so, then
2NC/1NR
2NC Solvency-General
CP solves the case and no AFF offense applies
2NCSolvency-Surveillance
A radically different approach to addressing surveillance
concerns is necessary given Washingtons polarization
Wright 15 (Jazzy Press Officer at the American Library Association, citing Alan S.
Inouye director of the American Library Associations (ALA) Office for Information
Technology Policy (OITP), Its time that we had a digital Constitutional Convention,
in District Dispatch, 5-28-15, http://www.districtdispatch.org/2015/05/we-need-tohave-a-digital-constitutional-convention/)
Is it time to organize a digital constitutional convention on the future of the
internet? In a thought-provoking op-ed published in The Hill, Alan S. Inouye, director of the American Library Associations (ALA)
Office for Information Technology Policy (OITP) calls on the nations leaders in government, philanthropy, and the not-for-profit sector
network engineers and policy wonksthat the Internet is at the same time a huge mechanism for opportunity and for control.
we
are so politically polarized at the national level. The latest evidence: the net neutrality debate. Except
Though the advent of the Internet is propelling a true revolution in society, were not ready for it. Not even close. For one thing,
it wasnt. For the most part, it was characterized by those who favor assertive regulatory change for net neutrality stating their
As the
battle lines were drawn, there was little room to pragmatically consider a
compromise advanced by some stakeholders. The current state of digital privacy
seems along these lines, as well. With copyright, it is even worse, as a decades-long debate has those favoring the
position, restating their position, then yelling out their position. Those arguing for the status quo policy did likewise.
strongest copyright protection possible dominating the discourse. Another problem, as the preceding discussion suggests, is that
issues clearly related to each othersuch as telecommunications, privacy, and copyrightare debated mostly in their own silos.
of the challenge we need to address as access to information in the digital society, but really were talking about the allocation of
powerso the stakes are even higher than some may think. In a number of respects, power is more distributed in digital society.
Obviously, laws, regulation, and related public policy remain important. Large traditional telecommunications and media companies
remain influential. But now the national information industry includes Google, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, and other major corporate
players who also effectively make public policy through product decisions. Similarly, the continuing de facto devolvement from
copyright law to a licensing regime (with the rapid growth of ebooks as the latest major casualty) also is shifting power from
government to corporations. In some respects, individuals also have more power thanks to the proliferation of digital information
and the internet that enable capabilities that previously only organizations could muster (e.g., publishing, national advocacy).
whatever gains were secured by amendment were already secured in large part or would have been in due time, amendment or not.
these assertions are made on his own authority, and he does not entertain
the possibility that circumstances would have intervened that slowed change, or
reversed its direction. Even in the case of a failed amendment, one might argue that by putting the change
sought on the Nation's political agenda , the amendment's proponents acted as a
catalyst for that change, which, in the absence of an amending mechanism, would not have otherwise
progressed in the same way. 31 Strauss also ignores the inherently unstable nature of
informal change. Congress may pass laws, but those laws are subject to repeal (or
presidential veto). Executive orders may be rescinded. Court decisions may be overruled ,
distinguished, or ignored. And so on. Consider the New Deal. David Kyvig contrasts Reconstruction with the New Deal
by noting the absence of any trace left by the latter in [*257] the text of the Constitution. 32 If Strauss's theory is
correct, one would have expected that the Supreme Court's federalism decisions during
the 1990s (and early 2000s) would have encountered more resistance from a public that had demanded
substantial changes to the small-c-constitution effected after 1937. 33 Yet it is precisely because the New
Deal did not enshrine its changes in the Constitution that change was provisional
and subject to yet more change in the future . 34
30 But often
2NC Solvency-Courts
Incremental judicial changes are surpassed by amendments.
Labunski 2k (Richard Professor of Journalism at the University of Kentucky, The
Second Constitutional Convention: How American People Can Take their
Government Back, p. 177-178)
For the judicial branch to serve its indispensable function within a complicated political
and legal environment, it must be able to create certain standards that preserve its
independence and legitimacy. Many of those standards permit judges to be creative in advancing the law and
shaping it to reflect changing conditions. But many of the self-imposed rules and procedures which
have developed over a long period of time and which judges believe are necessary for the courts to function significantly
limit the scope and pace of constitutional change . The American people cannot wait
while the courts make incremental modifications to the Constitution one case at a
time over many years. They must take bolder and more comprehensive action by
holding a second convention to recommend amendments that will help to restore
democratic principles and make government more accountable .
policy grounds n135 and excluded the Senate from the negotiation of treaties . n136
Congress and the President agreed on procedures for acquiring new territory and
admitting new states into the union. n137 The House and Senate established an
understanding of impeachable offenses, and insisted that partisanship was
inconsistent with judicial office. n138 George Washington set an enduring precedent of
the two-term presidency, and Abraham Lincoln marshaled support for the view that
states did not have a right to secede from the Union . The Senate understands that Presidents will
generally nominate only members of [*805] their own party to serve in government offices, while the President understands the
a national bank, and the Jacksonian Democrats replaced it with a narrow interpretation - John Marshall's formal endorsement of the
broad interpretation notwithstanding. n139 The Federalists successfully claimed that the federal tariff power could be used to
Presidents through
most of American history claimed a power to impound appropriated funds , and in
the 1970s Congress successfully established a framework for regulating the
presidential spending power and clarifying the congressional power of the purse . n141
Congress regularly passes "framework legislation" and "statutes revolving in constitutional law orbits." n142 For much of
the nineteenth century, legislatures were the primary institution for determining the
scope of individual rights and were able to settle such disputes at least as
effectively as the judiciary. n143 Extrajudicial constitutional settlements gain their stability from a variety of sources,
protect domestic manufacturers, and the Jacksonian Democrats forcefully abandoned that claim. n140
despite the absence of a formal commitment to the authority of precedent. Not least among these supports for settlement is popular
opinion. As Edward Corwin noted in outlining departmentalist theory, "finality of interpretation is hence the outcome - when indeed
it exists - not of judicial application of the Constitution ... but of a continued harmony of views among the three [*806]
departments. It rests, in other words, in the last analysis, on the voting power of public opinion." n144
As the oldest
formal constitution still in force, and one of the most rarely amended constitutions in the world,276 the
U.S. Constitution contains relatively few of the rights that have become popular in
recent decades,277 while some of the provisions that it does contain may appear
increasingly problematic, unnecessary, or even undesirable with the benefit of two hundred
years of hindsight.278 It should therefore come as little surprise if the U.S. Constitution
strikes those in other countriesor, indeed, members of the U.S. Supreme Court279 as out of date
and out of line with global practice.280 Moreover, even if the Court were committed
to interpreting the Constitution in tune with global fashion , it would still lack
the power to update the actual text of the document . Indeed, efforts by the Court to
update the Constitution via interpretation may actually reduce the likelihood of
formal amendment by rendering such amendment unnecessary as a practical
matter. 281 As a result, there is only so much that the U.S. Supreme Court can
do to make the U.S. Constitution an attractive formal template for other countries.
The obsolescence of the Constitution, in turn, may undermine the appeal of
American constitutional jurisprudence: foreign courts have little reason to
follow the Supreme Courts lead on constitutional issues if the Supreme
Court is saddled with the interpretation of an unusual and obsolete
constitution.282 No amount of ingenuity or solicitude for foreign law on the
part of the Court can entirely divert attention from the fact that the
Constitution itself is an increasingly atypical document .
Constitutional Controls Over War Powers in the Nuclear Age: The Argument for a
Constitutional Amendment", 40 Stan. L. Rev. 1543, Lexis)
None of the proposals to control nuclear weapons discussed above provide the kind of clarity and definitiveness
which one would hope would characterize the rules governing the initiation and prosecution of a nuclear war. These
proposals are grounded not in a line of clear precedent, but in a soggy morass of conflicting principles. Equally
important, there is the perception, by people who regard themselves as hardened realists, that to adhere religiously
to orthodox principles of congressional war declaration would be to render the entire nuclear defense deterrence
a constitutional amendment
concerning the appropriate distribution of war powers should be adopted. More than
any other legislative or rulemaking device, a constitutional amendment has a
chance of commanding sufficient authority to be credible, especially in time of
crisis. Because the constitutional problems associated with the control of nuclear weapons are so closely related
to the war powers in general, the amendment must deal with war powers generally. Because technical
capabilities of weapons and defense systems can change relatively rapidly, it is
important that the amendment does not rigidly lock the nation into any specific
procedure which is sure to become obsolete . Finally, the amendment ought to account for the
system virtually worthless. [*1587] Because of these considerations,
recent congressional tendency to avoid taking stands on controversial issues until public opinion has clearly been
discerned. Although the desire of members of Congress to see how their constituencies regard an issue is
understandable, following massive public sentiment is not a viable option in many nuclear scenarios. Analogous to
this congressional hesitancy is the Judiciary's reluctance to involve itself in questions of this kind. If my
characterization of the problem is correct, namely that the Executive, aided by judicial acquiescence, has expanded
its powers at the expense of congressional power, only one additional source of power on the federal level remains
-- that is, of course, the people. The amendment proposed below attempts to take all of the above considerations
into account.
Strauss is wrong
Denning and Vile 02 [Brannon P., Prof of Law @ Samford, and John R., Dept.
Chair of PoliSci @ MTSU, The Relevance of Constitutional Amendments: A Response
to David Strauss, 77 Tul. L. Rev. 247, ln]
But let us concede, for the sake of argument, that informal channels for
constitutional change would have developed. 28 We are then faced with another of
Strauss's troubling assumptions: that constitutional change advances, uninterrupted, toward whatever
progressive norms that we have heretofore relied on amendments to install in the Constitution - racial
equality, full political participation for women and eighteen-year-olds, and the
elimination of barriers to [*256] full enfranchisement for the poor and other
minorities. 29 In Strauss's world, there is no reaction, no backlash that forestalls future gains (perhaps
placing them out of reach), and no backsliding by courts or legislatures. Again and again, he
assures us that whatever gains were secured by amendment were already secured
in large part or would have been in due time, amendment or not. 30 But often these
assertions are made on his own authority, and he does not entertain the possibility that circumstances would
have intervened that slowed change, or reversed its direction. Even in the case of a failed
amendment, one might argue that by putting the change sought on the Nation's political agenda,
the amendment's proponents acted as a catalyst for that change, which, in the absence of an
amending mechanism, would not have otherwise progressed in the same way. 31 Strauss also
ignores the inherently unstable nature of informal change. Congress may pass laws, but those laws are subject to
repeal (or presidential veto). Executive orders may be rescinded. Court decisions may be overruled,
distinguished, or ignored. And so on. Consider the New Deal. David Kyvig contrasts
Reconstruction with the New Deal by noting the absence of any trace left by the
latter in [*257] the text of the Constitution. 32 If Strauss's theory is correct, one would have
expected that the Supreme Court's federalism decisions during the 1990s (and early 2000s) would have
encountered more resistance from a public that had demanded substantial changes to the
small-c-constitution effected after 1937. 33 Yet it is precisely because the New Deal did not
enshrine its changes in the Constitution that change was provisional and subject to yet more change in the future.
34
2NC-Delay
---Fiat is immediate and reciprocalensures fair division of
ground between the aff and neg, their interpretation means all
counterplans would be delay, and the neg could never win.
---amendment process is not inherently slow
Jackson 01 (Jesse L. Jackson, Jr., 2001, U.S. Representative, A More Perfect
Union: Advancing New American Rights)
Some will say that amending the Constitution once, not to mention eight times, takes too long, requires
too much energy, and costs too much money that its an inefficient stewardship of time and resources. The answer
to the first argument is that the Constitution has been amended twenty-seven times, including
seventeen times since the original Bill of Rights was passed. (The Bill of Rights itself required 811 days from
September 25, 1789, to December 15, 1791 for ratification.) Following the initial, usually lengthy struggle to get an amendment through
two-thirds of the House and Senate, there is no time limit for ratifying it that is, no seven-year limitation on ratifying amendments, as
many people believe. This schedule was arbitrarily placed on the Equal Rights Amendment (and later extended to ten years) and the D.C.
Statehood Amendment. Once a state legislature votes for an amendment, that affirmation remains in place, unless a later body reverses it.
How long it takes for my amendments to be passed by House and Senate, and ratified by three-quarters of the state
legislatures, will be determined by a combination of political leadership and the will of the American
people. If Americans have a strong desire for these rights have a political fire burning in their bellies such amendments can
be shuttled through the House and Senate and ratified relatively quickly after a legitimate
national debate on their substance and implications.
(Carol, How Congress helped thwart Obama's plan to close Guantanamo, 1-22,
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/01/22/107255/how-congress-helped-thwartobamas.html, ldg)
Key among the factors, the cables suggest: Congress' refusal to allow any of the
captives to be brought to the United States . In cable after cable sent to the State Department in
Washington, American diplomats make it clear that the unwillingness of the United
States to resettle a single detainee in this country even from among 17 ethnic
Muslim Uighurs considered enemies of China's communist government made
other countries reluctant to take in detainees. Europe balked and said the United States should
go first. Yemen at one point proposed the United States move the detainees from Cuba to America's SuperMax prison in the
Colorado Rockies. Saudi Arabia's king suggested the military plant micro-chips in Guantanamo captives before setting them free. A
January 2009 cable from Paris is a case in point: France's chief diplomat on security matters insisted, the cable said, that, as a
precondition of France's resettling Guantanamo captives the United States wants to let go, "the U.S. must agree to resettle some of
these same LOW-RISK DETAINEES in the U.S.'' In the end, France took two. Closing the Guantanamo detention center had been a key
promise of the Obama presidential campaign, and the new President Barack Obama moved quickly to fulfill it. Just two days after
taking the oath of office, on Jan. 22, 2009, Obama signed an executive order instructing the military to close Guantanamo within a
year. European countries were effusive in their praise. But as the second anniversary of that order passed Saturday, the prison
camps remain open, and the prospects of their closure appear dim. Prosecutors are poised to ramp up the military trials that Obama
once condemned, and the new Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Buck McKeon of California, last
detainees out of Guantanamo significantly easier,'' said the official, who agreed to
speak only anonymously because of the delicacy of the diplomacy.
2NCAT: Runaway
The CP solves --- a limited Constitutional convention solves.
Eidsmoe 92 (John Senior Counsel and Resident Scholar at the Foundation for
Moral Law, New Constitutional Convention--Critical Look at Questions Answered,
and Not Answered, by Article Five of the United States Constitution, 3 U.S. A.F.
Acad. J. Legal Stud. 35, http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?
handle=hein.journals/usafa3&div=6&g_sent=1&collection=journals)
Concon proponents answer that these fears are totally unfounded. States may limit the convention to a
single issue by calling for a convention for that limited purpose . Likewise, Congress, in
calling the convention, may in its statutory call limit the convention's authority and
purposes. The late Senator Everett Dirksen (R-Ill) believed a convention could be limited: I apprehend that
when the applications are for a stated purpose or amendment... then in effect the
state legislatures, which alone possess the initiative in convening a convention , have
by their own action taken the first step toward limiting the scope of the convention.
It would then remain for the Congress to implement this attempt to limit the
convention by making appropriate provision in its call .' The late Senator Sam Ervin (D-NC),
regarded as one of the leading constitutional experts ever to serve in the U.S.
Senate, also believed the states and Congress can limit the scope of a convention ."
The American Bar Association conducted a detailed study of the issue and reached the same conclusion in 1973.
2NCAT: Theory
CP provides unique education on surveillance and the
separation of powers.
Forsythe and Presser 6 (Clarke D. Director of the Project of Law and Bioethics at
Americans United for Life, and Stephen B. Professor of Legal History at
Northwestern University School of Law, RESTORING SELF-GOVERNMENT ON
ABORTION: A FEDERALISM AMENDMENT, 10 Tex. Rev. Law & Pol. 301,
http://www.trolp.org/main_pgs/issues/v10n2/Forsythe.pdf)
Our constitutional system provides only two ways to overturn a Supreme Court
holding interpreting the Constitution: an overruling decision by the Court itself or a
constitutional amendment. Obviously, constitutional amendments are among the most difficult political goals to
achieve in our constitutional system. This article is unique in its explanation of the legal effect and implications of a federalism
amendment on abortion. Because no previous legal analysis of this kind exists, this article is limited to evaluating the legal impact of
a federalism [*341] amendment. It is beyond the scope of this article to evaluate fully the political obstacles or implications
involved in the passage of such an amendment. For those who believe, as we do, that Roe has poisoned our political and judicial
discourse, the political obstacles facing such an amendment ought to be weighed against the political obstacles to changing the
Court's membership in the coming years to accomplish the same goal. Given that these political obstacles have resulted in a
situation where there are only two publicly-declared Justices remaining on the Supreme Court who advocate the overturning of Roe
thirty-three years after Roe, the obstacles to a constitutional amendment, while severe, may be less formidable than attempting to
thoroughly worked out. 8 No one need elaborate on what may happen if Congress calls a convention while the
convention process remains undefined; one need only reflect on the impact of the last convention on the Articles
of Confederation to gain a sense of the magnitude of change that might occur.
B. Arbitrary. Multi-actor fiat is not intrinsically more fiat than single-actor fiat.
Increasing a controversial restriction on executive authority is reciprocal to the
counterplan.
C. Undermines policy analysis and education. Issues like reciprocity are not
absolute and should be balanced against attempts to find the best policy and
developing arguments grounded in the literature.
---Optimal Policy-The purpose of policy debate is to find the best policy. The
affirmative has unlimited time to devise the best plan it can. If its proven not to be
the best, it should be rejected.
through Congress implies the persuasion of over half of its 535 members. Theres no
difference between this and persuading actors in other government institutions.
limited to domestic political actors in the United States. Debate is best understood
as an adjunct to democratic decision making. This explains why we always select
topics where we have at least some fractional impact on. This provides a fair limit
on negative fiat as state or local action as an alternative to federal action is a
recurrent issue in American politics.
---Search for best policy justifies. Net benefits checks abuse and is a
warrant for voting negative. No rational decision-maker would reject the
counterplan if it is a superior policy option to the affirmative.
sword for the affirmative since the status quo not restricting war power.This is a
solvency argument at best that enforcement would be uneven not a reason to reject
the counterplan.
Judicial review does not as effectively guarantee widespread public support for the
Constitution. 81 Rather than involving both Houses of Congress and each of the
states, overruling decisions involve only the federal courts. Moreover, while
amendments are valid because they follow the process mandated by the
Constitution, a Supreme Court decision is acceptable only if its interpretation of the
Constitution is convincing. Finally, judicial "amendments" contradict one of the
purposes of article V. The amendment process affirms that sovereign power remains
with the people and gives them a way to override the [*1357] judgment of the
judiciary. 82 As a consequence, judicial involvement in "amending" is
inherently suspect. 83
2NC Perm-Do CP
Court rulings on an issue are distinct from upholding the
amendment-Severance is illegitimate because if the 2AC could
pick and choose what part of the plan to defend, no
counterplan would compete.
Worthen 4 <Kevin J. (Professor of Law and Associate Dean, J. Reuben Clark Law
School, Brigham Young University), BYO Journal of Public Law, Same-Sex Marriage
Symposium Issue: Who Decides and What Difference Does It Make?: Defining
Marriage in Our Democratic, Federal Republic, 18 BYU J. Pub. L. 273, 2004, lexis>
[*306] As a practical matter, recent experience has demonstrated that state court judicial review of state statutes
can too easily lead to judicial resolution of the issue contrary to the will of the people and the legislature. n135 At
court judges appear to be too eager to the resolve the issue for
themselves, without a careful consideration of their proper role in the system. The
risk of tyranny of the judiciary is therefore somewhat high on such an impassioned issue.
This, in turn, lessens the net benefit of a "double" judicial security. More importantly,
as a theoretical matter, in our system, the ultimate sovereign who must remain
responsible for whatever acts the government takes is the people . n136 While there
are filters though which the people's judgment must pass before it is properly
implemented in our system, in the long run, it is their judgment, not that of the
judiciary, which should control. If a state constitutional amendment were adopted
through the non-initiative process, the people's judgment would have passed
through the requisite filters, and federal judicial review would be available to further
ensure that other more process-oriented norms were not violated . Thus, while a proponent
least some state
of "our democratic, federal, republican" form of government might be persuaded either way on the matter, this
particular proponent concludes that the optimum form of resolution of the same-sex marriage issue is to specifically
address the issue through a non-initiative generated state constitutional amendment.
are two different types of law that are used to govern different aspects of the society. Statutory Laws are laws that
have been written down and codified by the legislative branch of a country. The law has been set down by a legislature or legislator
Statutory laws
are often subordinate to the higher constitutional laws. The laws are written on a bill and must be passed by the
(if it is a monarchy) and codified by the government. These laws are also known as written law or session law.
legislative body of the government. Statutory laws originate from municipalities, state legislature or national legislature. The term
codified states that the law is organized by the subject matter. However, not all statutory laws are considered as codified. The
statues are often referred to as code. Codifying a law can also refer to taking a common law and putting it in statute or code form.
Statues are prone to being over written or expiring, depending on the law that was passed. Many countries depend on a mixed law
system to provide the proper justice. This is because statutory laws are often written in general language and may not govern every
situation that may arise. In cases like these, the courts must interpret and determine the proper meaning of the statute that is most
relevant to the case. Both statutory laws and common laws can be disputed and appealed in higher courts. Constitutional Law is the
body of law that defines the relationship between different entities within a nation, most commonly the judiciary, the executive and
the legislature bodies. Not all nations have a codified constitution, though all of them have some sort of document that states
certain laws when the nation was established. These rules could state the basic human rights of the man and women of that state,
including rights to own property, freedom of speech, etc. The main purpose of the constitutional law is to govern the law making
bodies in the nation. It gives them set boundaries of the laws they cannot violate. For example, the law makers cannot violate the
constitutional
law of a country can be changed if the government falls or changes. Additions can also be made to the constitution
in form of amendments.
publics rights to do certain things such as freedom of speech, right to petition, freedom of assembly, etc. The
Section 1. Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on
account of sex. Section 2. The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions
of this article. Section 3. This amendment shall take effect two years after the date of ratification. Here are some
following: "By getting married, the woman has consented to sex, and I don't think you can call it rape. She didn't
back down from the statement, in fact, she affirmed it in 2008, when Washington University bestowed an honorary
doctorate on her. In an interview with the student newspaper, she reiterated her prior statement. "I think that when
you get married you have consented to sex. That's what marriage is all about, I don't know if maybe these girls
Schlafly has all kinds of other crazy ideas too . From blaming the
Virginia Tech massacre on the English department to calling for the
impeachment of a Justice who voted to bar minors from receiving the death penalty ,
old Phyllis is the proud queen of the ultraconservative lobby. She also believes in men's supremacy ,
with a strong belief that men should avoid career women at all costs, and even the fact that women
deserve less pay than men in order to encourage them to pursue their Christapproved position as wives and mothers of many children: we want a society in which
missed sex ed." Phyllis
the average man earns more than the average woman so that his earnings can fulfill his provider role in providing a
home and support for his wife who is nurturing and mothering their children. She doesn't believe in women holding
management positions, wage equality, or discrimination protection in the workplace for women because such
protections might give women overtime work or promotions that interfere with her far more important domestic
To this day, the 87 year old Queen of Mean is at the forefront of movements
against women's health care, gay rights, and fair divorce. Michele Bachmann desires to go to
duties.
the White House with the teachings of her headmistress firmly at the forefront of her policies. Phyllis Schlafly is one
of the meanest women in the public eye, and Bachmann wants to be a bigger, badder, louder version of her.
AFF
2ACSolvency
Constitutional conventions are utterly irrelevant in changing
law.
Strauss 1 (David A. Harry N. Wyatt Professor of Law at the University of Chicago,
The Irrelevance of Constitutional Amendments, 114 Harv. L. Rev. 1457,
http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?
article=2986&context=journal_articles)
One final implication is the most practical of all. If amendments are in fact a sidelight,
then it will usually be a mistake for people concerned about an issue to try to address it by amending the Constitution. Their
resources are generally better spent on legislation, litigation, or private-sector activities. It is true that the
effort to obtain a constitutional amendment may serve very effectively as a rallying point for political activity. A constitutional
amendment may be an especially powerful symbol, and it may be worthwhile for a group to seek an amendment for just that
V are not a principal means of constitutional change is a claim about the relationship between supermajoritarian amendments and
fundamental, constitutional change. It should not be confused with the very different claim that judicial decisions cannot make
significant changes without help from Congress or the President; n25 and it certainly should not be confused with a global
changes of constitutional
magnitude - changes in the small-"c" constitution - are not brought about by discrete,
supermajoritarian political acts like Article V amendments. It may also be true that
such fundamental change is always the product of an evolutionary process and
cannot be brought about by any discrete political act - by a single statute, judicial decision, or
skepticism about the efficacy of political activity generally. The point is that
executive action, or (at the state level) by a constitutional amendment, whether adopted by majoritarian referendum or by some
rendered - at a point when a society for the most part has not changed, but the legislation, once enacted (or the decision, once
made), might be an important factor in bringing about more comprehensive change . The
difference between majoritarian legislation and a supermajoritarian constitutional amendment is that the latter is far more likely to
This argument presupposes that there is a difference between what might be called the
small-c constitution the fundamental political institutions of a society , or the
constitution in practice and the document itself. This distinction (about which I say more below) is imprecise, but it
is both coherent and useful. When people try to amend the Constitution that is, the document
they are not ultimately concerned about the document; they are concerned about the institutional
arrangements that the document is supposed to control. If those institutions do not
change, then the constitution in practice the small-c constitution, which I also call the constitutional order or
the constitutional regime has not changed, even if the text of the Constitution has changed. Similarly, as I
discuss below, it is coherent to say (as people often do) that certain changes are of a kind and magnitude that amount to changes in
amendments to
the text of the Constitution have been, at most, peripheral to the process of change
in the constitutional regime to the point that the small-c constitution would look the same even if there were no
the constitutional order even though the text remains the same. The proposition I am considering is that
the formal
amendment process will be the means of significant change only in certain limited
circumstances that hardly ever occur in a mature society. In particular, three conditions must
be present for the amendment process to make a difference. First, a formal supermajoritarian amendment
process is unlikely to be an important means of change unless the other usual
means of change, such as legislation and judicial interpretation , are unavailable for
historical necessity, formal amendments cannot ever cause important changes. Rather the point is that
some reason. If other means of change are available, they will probably have effected the change to a significant degree before a
supermajority can be assembled to amend the Constitution. Second, a formal amendment process is likely to make a difference only
when the supermajority that adopts the amendment is a temporary one that was assembled even though society had not
composition of the courts, then through changes in private behavior. The formal amendment process will have its most significant
effect when the supermajority sentiment does not persist. Finally,
unusually difficult to evade. An amendment that specifies a precise rule, for example, is more likely to have an effect
than one that establishes only a relatively vague norm. If its text is at all imprecise, an amendment that
is adopted at the high-water mark of public sentiment will be prone to narrow
construction or outright evasion once public sentiment recedes, as the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments were. If all these circumstances occur together, a temporary supermajoritys ability to adopt a formal amendment
might bring about a permanent change that would not have occurred without the formal amendment. But
this confluence
of conditions is unlikely to happen very often. I suggest below one instance in which it might have happened
the Twenty-second Amendment, which limits presidents to two terms. Even that example is not entirely clear. But that may be the
only occasion since the early days of the Republic when the formal amendment process seems to have made a substantial
difference.
agencies already existed. These agencies raised serious constitutional issues . They combined the functions
of the different branches, in apparent contravention of the separation of powers; they engaged in adjudication, although their
members were not judges appointed pursuant to Article III; and they assessed forms of civil liability without providing for a jury trial,
serious constitutional challenge. The constitutionality of administrative agencies has been settled at least since the Supreme Courts
1932 decision in Crowell v. Benson. In fact, because so many agencies were already well established by then, it seems fair to say
ConCon will simply devolve into bickering and get out of hand
very bad idea. Heres why. Our Problem is political, not legal or constitutional. All conservatives agree our Republic is in
serious trouble, and headed in a very bad direction. We must save it. The question is how. Let me be clear: our problem is a
political one, and the ONLY way we will fix it is winning politically . That means making the
Republican Party a true reform party. That means winning Party posts, and nominations and elections with reform candidates
committed to bold action to save the Republic. There is no substitute. There is no silver bullet. It will take time and a lot of effort.
There is no easy, elegant solution that allows us to sit on the sidelines or in ivory
towers. (including putting our hopes in a risky ConCon ). Some ConCon advocates argue that the fix for
our Republic is revising the language of the Constitution, to stop liberal Federal and Supreme Court rulings, and to roll-back
unconstitutional Federal legislation. In their arguments, the Courts and legislators are apparently confused by the wording of the
left sees an Article V Convention as the means to roll back gun rights, and to limit political speech. The left opposes the Founders
real intent. Theyve gotten around that pesky Constitution by winning elections with both Democrats and sadly some weak
Republicans who, over time, have stacked the courts with leftists that routinely distort or outright ignore the strict words of our
sacred document. That wont change by tightening the wording of the Constitution because they are ignoring those words now
anyway. The only way we are going to turn this around is replacing Federal legislators, the President and ultimately the judges with
strict constitutionalists. And you cant do that by changing the Constitution. Dangers of a Con-Con: GOP-control of State Legislatures
Doesnt Equate to a Con-Con of Federalists. Ive heard the election math on this. It goes, so a majority of the state legislatures are
Republican. These Republican legislatures would select the delegates to the ConCon and vote to ratify anything that came out of it.
No worries, it takes only 13 states to block anything bad. Lets be honest. Even though we are conservative Republicans, and
support the Republican Party as the best vehicle to save the Republic, can we really count on these current bodies to send solid
Founder-types to a ConCon? If our Republican legislatures are all so limited-Government, why did so many of those GOP-controlled
states accept Federal ObamaCare Medicaid dollars, contributing to a massive Federal debt ? And why did our GOP-controlled Virginia
General Assembly just pass the biggest tax hike in the Commonwealths history in 2013, expanding our state Government ? Many of
these Republicans unfortunately LIKE big government and the spending that goes with it. There is no guarantee they will send true
conservatives as delegates to a Con-Con. For example, who would Virginia send as its ConCon Delegate? House Speaker Bill Howell
or Senate Majority Leader Tommy Norment (each of whom was elected by majorities of Republicans in their respective caucuses)?
And would these ConCon Delegates and GOP legislators be beyond the influence of a massive George Soros $1B advertising
campaign to exert influence on them and their constituents, to get what the left wanted in this or a future ConCon? In the interest of
proposal to add the words, except in the case of reasonable state regulation, after shall not be infringed in Amendment 2 of the
Constitution? Political Momentum on our side and Danger of Distraction I hear frequently from some ConCon advocates this basic
argument: Weve lost. Weve tried to win politically. It hasnt worked. This is the only way we have left. That defeatist approach
dooms us to perennial minority status. First, its not true. We havent really organized the way we are capable of, the way the left
has. And there are more conservatives than liberals in this country. Second, this defeatist thinking is unfortunately infectious. It will
discourage conservative activists from PRECISELY the political engagement and organizing we CAN and MUST to do to win, at
precisely the time we are starting to win politically as we head into 2016. Can you imagine what we could accomplish with a
President Paul or President Cruz, and a wave of new change-agents in the House and Senate in 2016 ? This is what it will take to rollback 8 years of Obama. I realize many of us are discouraged. But the political winds are now on our side if we we work to raise our
sails. And our side is learning to organize more effectively than ever. Last year, Virginias 7th Congressional District was a cauldron
of revolutionary political change with national implications. First, GOP House Majority Leader Eric Cantors District Chairman,
Linwood Cobb, was upset by little-known Tea Party activist Fred Gruber at the May 10th Convention in a shocking upset. And just 30
days later, building on that momentum, Tea Party favorite Dave Brat toppled Cantor himself in the primary in an even more shocking
upset. I know a little about this, having recruited Gruber, and run his all-volunteer grassroots campaign. I enjoyed putting together a
team of grassroots leaders and activists and helping Brats historic campaign. We united and mobilized our entire conservative base
traditional social and fiscal conservative Republicans, new Tea Party-inspired activists, and the liberty movement. Ive seen the
brush-fire this kind of united grass-roots engagement can bring, and the turnabout that is possible. Dave Brat is now one of our key
rising leaders in the fight to restore our Republic. Yes, we need lots more Dave Brats and efforts like this. But this is the way we will
save our Republic: conservatives organizing precinct-by-precinct, and seat-by-seat for state and local offices, the House of
Representatives, U.S. Senate seats, and the Presidency. Ultimately, control of the Senate and White House for a prolonged period
means establishing a constitutionalist Federal Judiciary. 2016 is our year to do it. Perhaps the biggest concern with a Con-Con is the
division and distraction within our Conservative movement at this critical time when political momentum is on our side. We struggle
frequently to get our conservative activists smartly focused on the big-impact things, like organizing to win nominations and
elections. Some are easily distracted by policy debates and things that have no practical impact on winning. I see the potential for
conservative activists unwittingly being sucked into this ConCon if it passes, losing a Soros-funded nationwide PR battle, while the
lefts activists stay focused organizing locally and winning elections. And just look at the heated debate and division within our
conservative ranks in Virginia right now. The rhetoric has reached fever pitch, with some ConCon advocates calling opponents liars
if we
are deeply split, its probably a bad idea. Its counter-productive, and the establishment class
and threatening primary challenges. Not good. If Ive learned anything over the years organizing our conservative ranks:
and left lick their chops. I hope youll join me in calling your Delegate and State Senator to demand they vote NO on this bad idea,
however well intentioned.
2ACDelay
Amendments take years to be implemented
more substantive. A constitutionally provided line item veto would only allow the President to veto items that were specifically
provided for in appropriation bills. Most federal "line items", however, are found not in statute, but in report language accompanying
statutes.
2ACLegitimacy
Constitutional conventions and their resulting partisan
bickering weaken American legitimacy.
Schiafly 99 (Phyllis American conservative activist, author, and speaker and
founder of the Eagle Forum, Is a Con Con Hidden in Term Limits?, in the The
Schiafly Report, Vol. 29 No. 10, May 1999,
http://www.eagleforum.org/psr/1996/may96/psrmay96.html)
Most of us have watched a Republican National Convention or a Democratic
National Convention on television. We've seen the bedlam of people milling up and down the aisles. We've
watched how the emotions of the crowd can be stirred, and we've felt the tension when thousands of people make group decisions
with the Jesse Jackson caucus! No wonder Rush Limbaugh said that a Con Con would be the worst thing that could happen to
financial markets, and force all of us to re-fight the same battles that the Founding Fathers so brilliantly won in the Constitutional
Convention of 1787. George Washington and James Madison both called our Constitution a "miracle".
We can't count on a
2ACCourt Circumvention
The Courts interpretation will circumvent the CP.