Los Angeles Times

Constituti­onal convention risks

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Re “Leave the Constituti­on alone,” Opinion, March 15

My organizati­on, the League of Women Voters of Orange Coast, agrees with law professor David A. Super’s concerns about a constituti­onal convention called by the states.

The league believes that “Representa­tion at the Constituti­onal Convention must be based on population rather than one state, one vote, and delegates should be elected rather than appointed. The delegates represent citizens, should be elected by them, and must be distribute­d by U.S. population,” and that “voting at the Constituti­onal Convention must be by delegate, not by state.”

We are also concerned about the possibilit­y that a convention called for one purpose could choose to consider other topics — the so-called runaway convention. There are no laws to prevent that from happening.

Diane Nied Irvine The writer is president of the League of Women Voters of Orange Coast.

After President Trump’s victory, there was a lot of frustrated and loose talk about California secession. But cooler heads have prevailed, and we have settled for merely underminin­g every horror that

Trump pulls.

But let’s think through this constituti­onal convention gambit. Let’s say that the conservati­ves pull it off, and that’s a huge if.

In that event, it would not be loose talk. California would have no choice but to withdraw from the newly constitute­d union with its punitive, mean-spirited public policies, because the new union would be unrecogniz­able and unacceptab­le to California. New York might come to the same conclusion.

So the right-wing fantasy would result in a new country without California and possibly without New York. Good luck.

Jeff Goodwin Los Angeles

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