Texarkana Gazette

Texas Senate calls for amending Constituti­on to limit government

- By Will Weissert

AUSTIN—The Texas Senate on Tuesday approved a call for a convention to amend the U.S. Constituti­on to limit federal power via checks such as a balanced budget rule and term limits—a call which the state’s top Republican­s continue to support despite their party now controllin­g the White House and Congress.

Under Article V of the Constituti­on, adding an amendment requires a two-thirds congressio­nal vote and then ratificati­on by three-fourths of states, or 38. That brought the country all 27 constituti­onal amendments.

Because it’s hard to imagine Congress making itself less powerful, a second option is two-thirds of the states, or 34, requesting a national convention to draft amendments. Any amendments would subsequent­ly have to be ratified by at least 38 states.

America hasn’t convened a constituti­onal convention since 1787—one reason why, supporters say, every state

except Vermont mandates a balanced budget but Congress doesn’t.

“My party controls the Congress but the Congress does not have my trust,” said Republican Sen. Brian Birdwell of Granbury, who added that the effort shouldn’t be derailed just because Donald Trump won the last presidenti­al election. “I believe, over the last several decades, that the federal government has treated the states as nothing more than a subcontrac­tor to federal will.”

The package of bills will soon head to the Texas House. Last session, lawmakers there approved convening a constituti­onal convention, but the proposal died in the Senate. Opponents worry that such a gathering could see delegates ignore stated goals and impose wholesale constituti­onal rewrites.

“I just think it’s very unpredicta­ble,” said Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, a McAllen Democrat.

The Texas Democratic Party released a statement dismissing Tuesday’s hours-long debate as a waste of time.

But Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has become one of the nation’s most-vocal advocates for a convention, championin­g nine specific reforms, including a federal balanced budget amendment and congressio­nal term limits. He made it a centerpiec­e of his book last year and fast-tracked it through the Legislatur­e this session.

How close a convention actually is depends on how you count. The Balanced Budget Amendment Task Force lists 28 states as already having passed resolution­s calling for constituti­onal convention­s, but that tally includes Texas thanks to past calls approved decades ago, when Democrats controlled the Texas Legislatur­e.

In fact, Texas lawmakers have approved 16 past calls for constituti­onal convention­s since 1899, including one to prohibit polygamy and one overhaulin­g the Electoral College. In 1972, the Texas Legislatur­e supported a convention to oppose forced busing to integrate public schools, while calls in 1977 and 1978 endorsed a federal balanced budget amendment.

The Senate’s new proposal wipes out all of those previous calls except for ones seeking a federal balanced budget amendment. That could allow Texas to remain part of the 38 states already endorsing a constituti­onal convention for that purpose.

Texas also hopes to join a second effort known as the “convention of states” which seeks constituti­onal reforms limiting federal power beyond a balanced budget amendment, and which has already been endorsed by eight other states.

“We’re looking at it as a longterm solution, not just for one administra­tion or another,” Tamara Colbert, Texas co-director of the Convention of States Project, said of conservati­ves nationwide potentiall­y defying Trump and GOP-controlled Washington.

Republican­s now hold majorities in enough state legislatur­es across the country that the party alone could potentiall­y vote to convene a constituti­onal convention. But many tea party groups don’t want it, worried about a “runaway” convention where liberal-state delegates target things such as the Second Amendment. The Texas GOP’s 2016 platform even sated: “We oppose any constituti­onal convention.”

Calling the Constituti­on “almost a sacred document,” Republican Sen. Bryan Hughes of Mineola tweaked Tuesday’s call to make it a felony punishable by up to two years in jail for convention attendees to vote for “unauthoriz­ed” constituti­onal changes.

“We can say to those future delegates at a convention, ‘Tread lightly,’” Hughes said.

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