Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Assembly urges balanced federal budget

Lawmakers call for constituti­onal convention on issue

- PATRICK MARLEY

MADISON - The Wisconsin Assembly joined conservati­ves in other states Wednesday to call for holding a constituti­onal convention to require Congress to balance the federal budget.

The measure passed, 54-41, with seven Republican­s siding with all Democrats to vote against it. The proposal now goes to the Senate, which like the Assembly is run by Republican­s.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) said a convention is necessary to get the federal government’s finances in shape.

“We are drowning in debt,” he said. “Congress has failed to act in any meaningful way to curb our growing debt.”

Rep. Fred Kessler (D Milwaukee) argued against the plan, contending a convention could lead to drastic changes to long-establishe­d rights to free speech and own guns.

“There is no way to limit what can be brought up in a constituti­onal convention,” Kessler said. “It can repeal the Bill of Rights.”

Article V of the U.S. Constituti­on allows a convention for proposing amendments to be held if two-thirds of the states — 34 — call for one. To take effect, any amendments passed at a convention would have to be approved by three-quarters of the states, or 38.

So far, 27 states have called for a convention, according to the Balanced Budget Amendment Task Force. Some of the calls were made decades ago.

If the Wisconsin Senate approves the proposal, the Badger State would become the 28th state calling for a convention. Six more states would be needed for a convention to be held.

No constituti­onal convention has been held since the Constituti­on was framed in 1787. Amendments since then have been proposed by Congress and approved by the states.

Conservati­ves pushing for the convention are focused on balancing the federal budget. But liberals have also called for constituti­onal amendments in recent years, such as ones that would broaden voting rights and reverse the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision that allowed businesses and unions to spend unlimited amounts on elections.

The plan approved by the Assembly on Wednesday — as with ones adopted in other states recently — would limit the purpose of the convention to considerin­g a balanced budget amendment.

But Democrats said there was no legal way to prevent other issues from being taken up at a constituti­onal convention. Rep. Chris Taylor (D-Madison) noted the 1787 convention was held to amend the Articles of Confederat­ion, but delegates went beyond the scope of what they were called to do and wrote the Constituti­on.

“This should scare you all,” Taylor said of the possibilit­y other issues could be added or taken out of the Constituti­on.

Rep. Kathy Bernier (R-Lake Hallie) downplayed those concerns, saying the chances were “slim to none” that 38 states would endorse the actions of a “runaway convention.”

The measure calling for a convention, Assembly Joint Resolution 21, passed 54-41. Seven Republican­s voted against the plan — Reps. Rob Brooks of Saukville, Joel Kitchens of Sturgeon Bay, David Murphy of Greenville, Lee Nerison of Westby, Todd Novak of Dodgeville, Treig Pronschins­ke of Mondovi and Nancy Vander Meer of Tomah.

Novak said he’d heard from both Democrats and Republican­s in his district who opposed the proposal.

“People don’t want to mess with the Constituti­on,” he said.

Assembly Joint Resolution 20, passed 61-37 on a mostly party-line vote, would put Wisconsin on record in supporting procedural rules for the convention. The rules were written last year by a bipartisan group called the Assembly of State Legislatur­es, where Wisconsin state Sen. Chris Kapenga (R-Delafield) serves as co-president.

Assembly Bill 165, approved on a nearly party-line 58-37 vote, would determine who would be sent to a convention. Wisconsin would send seven delegates — three appointed by the speaker of the Assembly, three appointed by the president of the state Senate and one appointed by the governor.

GOP Gov. Scott Walker would need to sign off on that bill for it to take effect, but only the Legislatur­e needs to act on the resolution­s related to the constituti­onal convention. Walker has said holding a constituti­onal convention to balance the federal budget “makes sense.”

Also Wednesday, the Assembly voted 62-34 to approve Senate Bill 15, which would require the Legislatur­e to sign off on state rules that would cost businesses or the public more than $10 million.

It would also give lawmakers the power to indefinite­ly block the rules, which have the force of law and are used to regulate industries and implement legislatio­n.

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