Lodi News-Sentinel

If you know Madison’s Constituti­on, you’ll want to preserve it

- Jeffrey Sikkenga is executive director of the Ashbrook Center at Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio, an independen­t educationa­l center specializi­ng in U.S. history and government. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

March 16 was the birthday of a little man who made a huge impact on America. At 5-foot-4 and not much over 100 pounds, James Madison — our fourth president (1809-1817) — was the smallest of America’s founders. But he was a constituti­onal giant.

Madison didn’t write the Constituti­on singlehand­edly; it was the product of argument and compromise among those who attended the 1787 Constituti­onal Convention in Philadelph­ia. But of all the founders, Madison was most responsibl­e not only for the Constituti­on itself but also for the Bill of Rights that followed. That’s why he is fairly called “The Father of the Constituti­on.”

These days, however, Madison’s progeny is under attack. Critics denounce the Constituti­on as anti-democratic, proslavery, outdated and in desperate need of amendments on many issues, such as the Electoral College.

None of these criticisms would surprise Madison; he heard them in his own day. In response to antiFedera­lists who argued in 1787 that the Constituti­on did not create a democracy, Madison reminded them in The Federalist No. 10 that the goal was to establish a constituti­onal republic in which the people govern through the deliberati­on of representa­tives and the rule of law, not through instant public opinion, passion or the mob.

In response to those who claimed the Constituti­on was pro-slavery, Madison argued in The Federalist No. 42 that critics should not “pervert” the text into saying something it doesn’t. The words of the Constituti­on were a compromise on slavery that neverthele­ss “ought to be considered as a great point in favor of humanity” because they left open the eventual abolition of the “unnatural traffic” of slave trade and “the illicit practice” of slavery itself. Madison’s argument was later taken up by opponents of slavery, including Abraham Lincoln and the great Black abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass.

In defending the Constituti­on, Madison knew it wasn’t perfect. That’s one reason he offered what are now the first 10 amendments: the Bill of Rights. It’s also the reason we have important amendments like those abolishing slavery and extending the right to vote. The Constituti­on can be improved.

But before we replace or radically alter Madison’s Constituti­on, we need to remember how fortunate we are. It’s hard to have and keep a constituti­on that promotes stable government, protects individual freedom and secures the rule of law. Lots of other countries have tried and failed.

To preserve what is good in the Constituti­on, Madison knew, as he said in The Federalist No. 49, that the document must continue to have “that veneration … without which the wisest and freest government­s would not possess the requisite stability.” In other words, the key to the Constituti­on’s continuing success is not just its words, but the effect those words have on the hearts and minds of the American people.

“We the People” need to be a constituti­onal people who understand why the Constituti­on says what it says. If we don’t, as Madison understood, our experiment in self-government will fail and we will lose the “Blessings of Liberty” the Constituti­on proclaims.

Sadly, survey after survey shows that too many Americans, especially younger Americans, have neither the knowledge of, nor the devotion to the Constituti­on that Madison called for. It’s a serious crisis.

The only way to remedy this is by studying the words and principles of the Constituti­on itself. Before jumping on the bandwagon of those who claim the Constituti­on is hopelessly outdated, we need to read and understand what the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and Constituti­on actually say. We need to relive the great debates over the Constituti­on and our founding principles so we understand who we are as a people — and what it means to be an American. And when we consider any change to the Constituti­on, it should always be a change that brings the document more — not less — in line with our founding principles of individual liberty, personal responsibi­lity and limited government.

Every year, crowds of Americans visit national monuments to George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. And rightfully so. But there is no such monument to James Madison.

His monument is the Constituti­on. The better you know it, the more inclined you will be to preserve it.

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