cb_mirror_public:can_we_trust_the_constitution_pdf_files_12852

Title: Can We Trust The Constitution

Original CoS Document (slug): can-we-trust-the-constitution

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Attached File: Article3-CanWeTrust_COSA102022.pdf

Created: 2021-07-21 13:56:44

Updated: 2024-06-24 17:26:21

Published: 2021-07-21 00:00:00

Converted: 2025-04-14T20:00:13.549860215


background image Can We Trust the Constitution?

Answering The “Runaway Convention” Myth
Michael P. Farris, JD, LLM, Convention of States Action — Senior Fellow for Constitutional Studies

Updated November 2022
Some people contend that our 
Constitution was illegally adopted as the 
result of a “runaway convention.” They 
make two claims:

1. The convention delegates were instructed to 
merely amend the Articles of Confederation, but 
they wrote a whole new document.
 
2. The ratification process was improperly 
changed from 13 state legislatures to 9 state 
ratification conventions.

The Delegates Obeyed Their 
Instructions from the States

The claim that the delegates disobeyed 
their instructions is based on the idea 
that Congress called the Constitutional 
Convention. Proponents of this view 
assert that Congress limited the 
delegates to amending the Articles of 
Confederation. A review of legislative 
history clearly reveals the error of this 
claim. The Annapolis Convention, not 
Congress, provided the political impetus 

for calling the Constitutional Convention. 
The delegates from the 5 states 
participating at Annapolis concluded 
that a broader convention was needed 
to address the nation’s concerns. They 
named the time and date (Philadelphia; 
second Monday in May).

The Annapolis delegates said they 
were going to work to “procure the 
concurrence of the other States in the 
appointment of Commissioners.” The 
goal of the upcoming convention was 
“to render the constitution of the Federal 
Government adequate for the exigencies of 
the Union.”

What role was Congress to play in calling 
the Convention? None. The Annapolis 
delegates sent copies of their resolution to 
Congress solely “from motives of respect.”

What authority did the Articles of 
Confederation give to Congress to call 
such a Convention? None. The power of 
Congress under the Articles was strictly 

limited, and there was no theory of 
implied powers. The states possessed 
residual sovereignty which included the 
power to call this convention.

Seven state legislatures agreed to 
send delegates to the Constitutional 
Convention prior to the time that 
Congress acted to endorse it. 
The 
states told their delegates that the 
purpose of the Convention was the one 
stated in the Annapolis Convention 
resolution: “to render the constitution of 

the Federal Government adequate for the 
exigencies of the Union.

Congress voted to endorse this 
Convention on February 21, 1787. It did 
not purport to “call” the Convention 
or give instructions to the delegates. It 
merely proclaimed that “in the opinion 
of Congress, it is expedient” for the 
Convention to be held in Philadelphia on 
the date informally set by the Annapolis 
Convention and formally approved by 7 
state legislatures.

Ultimately, 12 states appointed delegates. 
Ten of these states followed the phrasing 
of the Annapolis Convention with only 
minor variations in wording (“render 
the Federal Constitution adequate”
). Two 
states, New York and Massachusetts, 
followed the formula stated by Congress 
(“solely amend the Articles” as well as 
“render the Federal Constitution adequate”
).

Every student of history should know 
that the instructions for delegates came 
from the states. In Federalist 40, James 
Madison answered the question of “who 
gave the binding instructions to the delegates.”
 
He said: “The powers of the convention 
ought, in strictness, to be determined by an 
inspection of the commissions given to the 
members by their respective constituents 
[i.e. 
the states]. He then spends the balance 
of Federalist 40 proving that the delegates 
from all 12 states properly followed the 
directions they were given by each of 
their states. According to Madison, the 

We can’t walk
boldly into our
future, without
first understanding
our history.

Continued on back page 

background image February 21st resolution from Congress 
was merely “a recommendatory act.”

The States, not Congress, called the 
Constitutional Convention. They told their 
delegates to render the Federal Constitution 
adequate for the exigencies of the Union. 
And that is exactly what they did.

The Ratification Process Was
Properly Changed

The Articles of Confederation required any 
amendments to be approved by Congress 
and ratified by all 13 state legislatures. 
Moreover, the Annapolis Convention 
and a clear majority of the states insisted 
that any amendments coming from the 
Constitutional Convention would have 
to be approved in this same manner—by 
Congress and all 13 state legislatures.

The reason for this rule can be found in the 
principles of international law. At the time, 
the states were sovereigns. The Articles of 
Confederation were, in essence, a treaty 
between 13 sovereign nations. Normally, 
the only way changes in a treaty can be 
ratified is by the approval of all parties 
to the treaty.

However, a treaty can provide for something 
less than unanimous approval if all the 

parties agree to a new approval process 
before it goes into effect. This is exactly 
what the Founders did.
When the Convention sent its draft of 
the Constitution to Congress, it also 
recommended a new ratification process. 
Congress approved both the Constitution 
itself and the new process.

Along with changing the number of required 
states from 13 to 9, the new ratification 
process required that state conventions 
ratify the Constitution rather than state 
legislatures. This was done in accord 
with the preamble of the Constitution—
the Supreme Law of the Land would be 
ratified in the name of “We the People” 
rather than “We the States.”

But before this change in ratification 
could be valid, all 13 state legislatures 
would also have to consent to the new 
method. All 13 state legislatures did 
just this by calling conventions of the 
people to vote on the merits of the 
Constitution.

Twelve states held popular elections to 
vote for delegates. Rhode Island made 
every voter a delegate and held a series of 
town meetings to vote on the Constitution. 
Thus, every state legislature consented 
to the new ratification process thereby 
validating the Constitution’s requirements 

for ratification.

Those who claim to be constitutionalists 
while contending that the Constitution 
was illegally adopted are undermining 
themselves. It is like saying George 
Washington was a great American hero, 
but he was also a British spy. I stand 
with the integrity of our Founders who 
properly drafted and properly ratified 
the Constitution.

Website: ConventionOfStates.com | E-mail: info@ConventionOfStates.com

Phone: (540) 441-7227 | www.Facebook.com/ConventionOfStates | Twitter: @COSProject

The Constitution was  
legally adopted. Now, 
let’s move on to getting 
our nation back to the 
greatness the Founders 
originally envisioned.

cb_mirror_public/can_we_trust_the_constitution_pdf_files_12852.txt · Last modified: 2025/04/14 20:00 by 127.0.0.1

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