cb_mirror_public:cos_fl_opposition_debunk_pdf_files_21778

Title: COS-FL Opposition Debunk

Original CoS Document (slug): cos-fl-opposition-debunk

Login Required to view? No

Attached File: 2023Sept_HCLDM_COSInfoPacket.pdf

Created: 2023-09-22 17:16:05

Updated: 2024-09-22 23:00:00

Published: 2023-09-22 00:00:00

Converted: 2025-04-14T20:13:50.801835278


background image Article V’s convention process 
is part of the beautiful 
constitutional machinery built 
to protect the states and the 
people from an overreaching 
federal government. 

FIVE MYTHS ABOUT  

AN ARTICLE V CONVENTION 
Rita Dunaway, Esq., National Legislative Strategist for Convention of States Action 
Updated November 2022 

THE CONSTITUTIONAL boundaries 
separating the three federal branches 
and setting outer limits on their power 
are barely visible anymore. Many 
Americans are turning toward Article 
V of the Constitution to restore those 
boundaries. Constitutional amendment 
is strong medicine, to be sure, but it is the 
medicine that our Founders prescribed 
for the disease of federal overreach that is 
otherwise terminal to our Republic.

Here are five myths about the Article 
V antidote and its side effects. 

1. An Article V convention is a “Consti-
tutional Convention” or “Con-Con.”
This point can get confusing, because Ar-
ticle V is a provision of the Constitution,

so a convention held pursuant to its terms 
could be described as “constitutional” in 
that sense. But what most people mean 
when they describe an Article V conven-
tion as a “Con-Con” is that it is the same 
type of gathering as the one in 1787 that 
produced our Constitution. And that im-
plication is clearly wrong.

The distinction between the Philadelphia 
Convention of 1787 and a convention held 
pursuant to Article V lies in the source of 
authority for each. The states gathered in 
1787 

pursuant to their residual powers as 

individual sovereigns—not pursuant to any 
provision of the Articles of Confederation 
for proposing amendments. 

An Article V convention, on the other 

hand, derives its authority from the 
terms of Article V itself and is therefore 
limited to proposing amendments to the 
Constitution we already have, pursuant 
to the prescribed procedures.   

2. We have no idea how an Article V
convention would operate.
Article V itself is silent as to the pro-
cedural details of a convention, leading

some to speculate that we are left clue-
less as to how the meeting would func-
tion. But while it’s true that there has 
never been an Article V convention, per 
se
, the states have met in conventions 
an estimated 40 times. There is a clear 
precedent for how these meetings work.

In fact, many of the Framers had 
attended one or more conventions, 
and the basic procedures were always 
the same. For instance, voting at an 
interstate convention is always done as 
states, with each state getting one vote, 
regardless of population or the number 
of delegates in attendance (that’s 
why it’s a convention of states—not a 
convention of delegates). 

The more detailed, parliamentary rules 
of the convention are decided by the 
delegates at the convention itself. 

3. The topic of an Article V convention
cannot be limited, so convention
delegates could re-write the entire
Constitution once they assemble.

Continued on back page

background image Article V’s convention 
process is part of the 
beautiful constitutional 
machinery built to protect 
the states and the people 
from an overreaching 
federal government.

Continued from front page

If states weren’t free to define the scope 
of an Article V convention, then Ameri-
ca would have already witnessed many 
of them. Over the course of our nation’s 
history, states have filed over 400  appli-
cations for Article V conventions. The 
reason we haven’t had one yet is because 
there have never been 34 applications re-
questing a convention on the same topic. 
  
Moreover, this proposition makes no 
sense from a historical, practical or legal 
perspective. In every interstate conven-
tion ever held, there was always  a spec-
ified topic or agenda for the meeting. 
Practically speaking, some limitation on 
the topic is necessary in order for the state 
legislatures to provide instructions to the 
delegates they send as their agents (states 
always instruct their delegates). 

4. Congress would control an Article 
V convention.
Anyone who has read James Madison’s 
record of the Philadelphia Convention 
proceedings knows that the very reason 
the drafters added the convention meth-

od of proposing amendments to Article 
V was to give the states a way to bypass 
Congress— which has its own, express 
power to unilaterally propose amend-
ments. They would never have given 
Congress control over both methods. 
   
Congress only has two powers related to 
the convention: to issue the formal call, 
setting the date and location of the con-
vention once 34 similar applications are re-
ceived, and to choose between two meth-
ods of state ratification for any proposals 
offered by the convention. That’s it.

In fact, at least one federal court has de-
finitively ruled that Congress cannot use 
any of its Article I powers—including its 
power under the Necessary and Proper 
Clause— to affect Article V procedures. 
 
5. The Article V convention process 
has no safeguards to protect our 
Constitution from rogue delegates or 
big-money special interest groups. 
To the contrary, the process is so well-safe-
guarded that it has proven incredibly dif-
ficult to invoke! There are numerous, re-
dundant safeguards on the process. 

First, the topic specified in the 34 appli-
cations that trigger the convention act as 
an initial limitation on it. These applica-
tions are the very source of authority for 
the convention, so any proposals beyond 
their scope would be out of order. 
 
Second, state legislatures can recall any del-
egates who exceed their authority or instruc-
tions. Convention delegates are the agents 
of their state legislature and are subject to 
its instructions. As a matter of basic agency 
law, any actions taken outside the scope of a 
delegate’s authority would be void.
   
But the final and most effective protection 
of the process is the simple fact that it takes 
38 

states to ratify any amendment proposed 

by the convention. This means that it would 
only take 13 states to block any ill-conceived 
or illegitimately advocated proposal.

Article V’s convention process is part of 
the beautiful constitutional machinery 
built to protect the states and the people 
from an overreaching federal govern-
ment. It is time for us to use it.

Originally published on TheBlaze.com

(540)441-7227 | CONVENTIONOFSTATES.COM | Facebook.com/ConventionOfStates | Twitter.com/COSproject 

background image Rita Dunaway 
 
Rita Dunaway is a constitutional attorney, the author of Restoring America’s Soul: Advancing Timeless 
Conservative Principles in a Wayward Culture, and co-host of the weekly radio program, “Crossroads: 
Where Faith and Culture Meet.” She serves as National Legislative Strategist for the Convention of 
States Project. 
 
Prior to joining the Convention of States Project, Rita spent approximately 10 years as Staff Counsel 
for The Rutherford Institute, where she worked to protect the civil liberties of Americans across the 
nation.  She has authored numerous briefs for the United States Supreme Court and the federal 
appellate courts. 
 
As an allied attorney for Alliance Defending Freedom and a volunteer for two Virginia-based 
conservative policy organizations, Rita has enjoyed being involved in the public policy process for 
several years and regularly testifies before legislative committees at the Virginia General Assembly. 
 
Rita’s commentaries are published weekly in The Daily News Record in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and 
have also appeared online at WND.com and The Blaze. 
 
As a Presidential Scholar at West Virginia University, Rita earned dual bachelor degrees in 1998, 
graduating summa cum laude from both the Journalism and Political Science departments.  She then 
continued her education as a Benedum Scholar at Washington and Lee University School of Law, from 
which she graduated cum laude in 2001. 
 
Rita is a member of the Virginia State Bar and lives in the Shenandoah Valley with her husband, Scott 
and their two children. 

background image No, a Convention of States Could Not 

Change the “One State/One Vote” 

Rule 

Professor Robert Natelson 

January 22, 2023   

Could a convention of states could change the “one state/one vote” rule to one based 
on population? The short answer is “No.” 

In at least 42 conventions of states1 and colonies over 350+years, there is no precedent 
for such a change. The possibility exists only in the fantasies of convention opponents. 

Defenders of the federal government and other opponents of an Article V convention 
raise the issue in two contradictory ways. In urban states, they attack the Constitution’s 
convention process for using the one state/one vote rule. (The say it is 
“undemocratic.”) But in rural states, they attack the Constitution’s convention process 
because, they say, it might not use the one state/one vote rule! 

(They used to claim Congress could write the rules before the evidence made that 
argument untenable2.) 

Why the Question is Based on Fantasy 

The one state/one vote system is based on a core principle of interstate conventions: 
sovereign equality. Claims that a convention might discard that core principle disregard 
political, demographic, historical, and legal realties. 

Let’s examine the political and demographic facts first. 

Political and Demographic Realities 

When the convention meets, it operates on a one state/one vote basis. To change this 
to a population formula requires a vote of a majority of states present—most likely 26 
of 50. 

Would 26 states vote for such a change? Not in a million years. Here’s why: 

•  A population formula would give states with more-than-average populations 

more power at the convention. States with less-than-average populations would 
lose power. 

background image •  As of 2023, the population of the fifty states (that is, excluding the District of 

Columbia and Puerto Rico) is 338 million. Divide that by 50 and you get the 
average state population: about 6.76 million. 

•  Thus, a change to a population formula, would cause every state with a 

population of less than 6.76 million to lose power. 

•  There are only 17 states with more than 6.75 million people. 33 states have less. 

•  Even if (which is unlikely) all 17 urban states voted for a population-based 

system, at least nine rural states would have to vote to reduce their own power. 

•  Some of the more conservative large states like Florida, Texas, Tennessee, and 

Indiana probably would not vote to change the rule—so even more rural states 
would have to vote to disenfranchise themselves. 

The Realities of Experience 

In 42 prior conventions of states and colonies held over 350 years, there were efforts to 
change the sovereign equality principle at only three. All lost. 

•  At the Albany convention of 1754, there was talk about given some colonies 

more weight. The idea was abandoned. 

•  In 1783, the Massachusetts legislature called for a convention where the 

decisions would be made by a majority of delegates rather than by a majority of 
states. The call fizzled when important states simply refused to participate. 

•  The 1850 Nashville Convention witnessed an effort to give larger states more 

representation. It failed on a series of one state/one vote roll calls. 

These experiences show how well accepted the sovereign equality principle is. It also 
shows how efforts to change it cause states to rebel. 

What Does the Constitution Say? 

Some scholars argue that, in the Article V context, changing the one-state/one vote 
formula also would be illegal. They point out that key Founders—people like Alexander 
Hamilton, James Madison, and Tench Coxe—characterized an amendments convention 
in ways consistent only with the principle of sovereign equality. (See, for example, 
Federalist No. 85.) 

Whether or not this argument is right is less important than the fact that it could tie up 
any convention in litigation for months, perhaps years. Would convention 
commissioners from a majority of states want to destroy their own effectiveness and 

background image legitimacy in that way? If any tried, they likely would be recalled by the state 
legislatures that sent them. 

A Reminder 

Although a convention for proposing amendments will meet on terms of sovereign 
equality, any proposals will require ratification by three fourths of the states. Than 
means they will have to be mainstream proposals with wide public support. 
 
 

 

1List of Conventions of States and Colonies in American History—https:%%//%%articlevinfocenter.com/list-conventions-states-colonies-\\ american-history/

 

2No, the Necessary and Proper Clause Does NOT Empower Congress to Control an Amendments Convention—
https://articlevinfocenter.com/no-the-necessary-and-proper-clause-does-not-empower-congress-to-control-an-amendments-convention
/

 

 

background image Rob Natelson 
Professor Robert G. Natelson, who contracts with Independent Institute, heads the 
Institute’s Constitutional Studies Center and its Article V Information Center1.  His vast 
range of experience includes education, outdoorsmanship, grass-roots activism, 
commercial talk radio, small business, initiative and referendum, political campaign 
management, journalism, and the teaching and practice of several fields of law. 

Most importantly, he is a nationally known constitutional scholar2 and author3 whose 
constitutional research has been cited repeatedly by justices and parties at the U.S. 
Supreme Court==as well as by federal appeals courts, and at least 16 state supreme 
courts. 

Rob is widely acknowledged to be the country’s leading active scholar on the 
Constitution’s amendment procedure and among the leaders on several other topics. 
He created the first-ever online bibliography4 for 18th century materials used in 
constitutional research. 

Scholarly record 

After eleven years of “Main Street”-style law practice, Rob served 25 years as a law 
professor at three different universities. He taught Constitutional Law, Constitutional 
History, Advanced Constitutional Law, and First Amendment. But at various times he 
also taught real property law, contracts, remedies, commercial law, real estate 
transactions, trusts, homeowner associations law, water law, oil & gas law, and legal 
history. 

His research into the Constitution’s original meaning has carried him to libraries 
throughout the United States and in Britain, including four months at Oxford University. 
His books and articles span many different parts of the Constitution, including 
groundbreaking studies of the Necessary and Proper Clause, the Indian Commerce 
Clause, federalism, Founding-Era interpretation, regulation of elections, and the 
amendment process of Article V. 

Since 2013, Rob has become one of the most-cited constitutional scholars by U.S. 
Supreme Court justices. They have relied explicitly on his research in 39 citations in 11 
separate cases. The cases are: 

•  Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency, ___ U.S. ___ (2023) (Thomas & 

Gorsuch, JJ., concurring) 

•  United States v. Vaello Madero, 596 U.S. ___ (2022), 141 S.Ct. 1534, 1546 

(Thomas, J., concurring) 

background image •  Espinoza v. Montana Dep’t of Revenue, 591 U.S. ___ (2020), 140 S.Ct. 2246, 2270 

(Alito, J., concurring) 

•  Haalan v. Brackeen, ___ U.S. ___ (2023) (Thomas, J., dissenting) 
•  Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion Co. v. Talevski, ___ U.S. ___ (2023) (Thomas, 

dissenting) 

•  Arizona State Legislature v. Arizona Independent Redistricting Comm’n, 576 U.S. 

787, 836 (2015) (Roberts, C.J., dissenting) 

•  National Labor Relations Board v. Noel Canning, 573 U.S. 513, 576 (2014) (Scalia, 

J., concurring) 

•  Town of Greece v. Galloway, 572 U.S. 565, 605-05 (2014) (Thomas, J., concurring) 
•  Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc., 570 U.S. 1, 30 (2013) (Thomas, J., 

dissenting) 

•  Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, 570 U.S. 637, 658-59 & passim (2013) (Thomas, J., 

concurring). 

•  Upstate Citizens for Equality v. United States, 583 U.S. ___ (2017), 140 S.Ct. 1287, 

1288 (Thomas, J. dissenting from denial of certiorari). 

He has been cited on constitutional and non-constitutional subjects in these federal 
appeals court cases: 

•  By Justice (then Judge) Gorsuch in Kerr v. Hickenlooper, 754 F.3d 1156,1195 (10th 

Cir. 2014) (dissenting) 

•  Koch v. Village of Heartland, 73 F.4th 747, 752 (2022 (op. for court, St. Eve, J.) 
•  United States Telecom Ass’n v. Federal Communications Comm’n, 855 F.3d 381, 

414 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (Srinivasan J., concurring) 

•  Upstate Citizens for Equality v. United States, 841 F.3d 556, 568 (2d Cir. 2016) (op. 

for court, Carney, J.) 

•  Berlin v. Renaissance Rental Partners, 723 F.3d 119 (2d Cir. 2013) (Jacobs, C.J., 

dissenting) 

•  CREW v. Trump, 939 F.3d , 131, 162 (2d Cir. 2019) (Walker, J., dissenting) 

Rob’s work on constitutional and non-constitutional subjects also has been relied upon 
by: 

•  the highest state courts in Alaska, California, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, 

Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, 
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, and Washington; 

background image •  the highest court of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; 
•  intermediate state appellate courts in Oregon and Washington; and 
•  U.S. District Courts in Colorado, Maine Nevada, and Wisconsin. 

He is a principal author of several Supreme Court briefs submitted by the Independence 
Institute and other organizations to the U.S. Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals 
for the Tenth Circuit, and the Colorado and Montana Supreme Courts. 

In addition to his work on U.S. constitutional issues: 

•  in conjunction with his eldest daughter Rebecca, he edited the first complete 

Internet versions5 of the Emperor Justinian’s great Roman law collection (in 
Latin); 

•  he has published widely on property law, legal history, legal remedies, and the 

initiative and referendum process; and 

•  he has published extensive historical and legal research on the Montana state 

constitution, and he created the database the Documentary History of the 
Ratification of the Montana Constitution6. 

He is a member of the Board of Scholars of the American Legislative Exchange Council. 
He formerly served as a senior advisor to the Convention of States Project and as Senior 
Fellow at the Initiative and Referendum Institute. 

There are several keys to his success as a scholar. First, unlike most constitutional 
writers, he actually practiced law for over a decade—and his law practice bore some 
resemblance to that pursued by several of the American Founders (real estate, 
commercial, etc.). Second, his experience in the real world of business, 
communications, and politics provide valuable perspective most constitutional writers 
lack. Third, unlike most other constitutional writers, he has academic training in history 
and in the Greco-Roman classics that were the mainstay of Founding-Era education. 
Finally, he does not enter a research project to promote some pre-determined 
conclusion. His agenda is to find and publish the truth. 

Popular Market 

For the popular market, Rob authored the highly influential Article V Handbook for 
state lawmakers7 and the popular book, The Original Constitution: What It Actually Said 
and Meant8.  His contributions have appeared in the following national outlets: The 
Washington Post, the Washington Times, The Economist, the Epoch Times, the 
American Spectator, the Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, the Daily Caller, Townhall.com, 
The Hill, and CNSNews. 

background image Activities in Colorado and Montana 

He grew up on the Revolutionary War town of Stony Point, New York—which helps 
explain his interest in the American Founding—but he has split most of his adult life 
between Colorado (1977-1987; 2011-present and Montana (1987-2011). His writings 
have appeared in most major news outlets in Colorado and in all major news outlets in 
Montana, and he regularly makes personal appearances in both states. His professional 
offices are in Colorado, as is his law license. When living in Montana, he created and 
hosted the state’s first statewide commercial radio talk show; became Montana’s best 
known political activist9; led victorious ballot-issue campaigns, including the most 
successful petition-referendum drive in the state’s history; and helped push through 
several important pieces of legislation. In June 2000, he was the runner-up among five 
candidates in the party primaries for Governor of the State of Montana. 

Recreation? He loves to spend time in the great outdoors, where he enjoys skiing and 
hiking, either alone or in the company of his wife, daughters, and sons-in-law. He also 
likes travel, science fiction, and opera, and is active in the Denver Lyric Opera Guild10. 

 

 

1Aricle V Information Center http://articlevinfocenter.com/

 

2Lost Meanings http:%%//%%archive.umt.edu/urelations/Vision/2009/lost%20meanings.html 

3Robert Natelson: Books & Articles https://i2i.org/constitution/articles-books-by-rob-natelson/

 

4A Bibliography for Researching Original Understanding https://i2i.org/wp-content/uploads/Originalist-Bibliography-2016-0930.pdf

 

5Roman Law Sources http:%%//%%constitution.i2i.org/classical-roman-law-sources/ 

6Documentary History of the Ratification of the Montana Constitution http:%%//%%www.umt.edu/law/library/montanaconstitution/ 

7Proposing Constitutional Amendments by a Convention of the States: Article V—A Handbook for State Lawmakers 
https://alec.org/publication/article-v-a-handbook-for-state-lawmakers/

 

8The Original Constitution: What It Actually Said and Meant https://www.amazon.com/Original-Constitution-What-Actually-
Meant/dp/1502933624
/

 

9COLUMN: Natelson will leave legacy of strong conservative base in Montana https://i2i.org/wp-content/uploads/Missoulian-Johnson-
conservative-base.pdf

 

10Denver Lyric Opera Guild http://www.denverlyricoperaguild.org///     ====== Document Outline ====== * ArticleV-FiveMyths_COSA102022.pdf * AboutRitaDunaway.pdf * Rita Dunaway * One State—One Vote.pdf * Why the Question is Based on Fantasy * Political and Demographic Realities * The Realities of Experience * What Does the Constitution Say? * A Reminder * AboutRobNatelson.pdf * Rob Natelson * Scholarly record * Popular Market * Activities in Colorado and Montana —-

cb_mirror_public/cos_fl_opposition_debunk_pdf_files_21778.txt · Last modified: 2025/04/14 20:13 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki