Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Better constituti­ons than the Constituti­on

- Jamelle Bouie is a columnist for The New York Times.

There are two constituti­onal traditions in the United States. The first is the one we all know, tied to Philadelph­ia and the framers, the Civil War and Reconstruc­tion. It’s the one that structures our political system and fuels some of our most heated conflicts. The second is a little more obscure, despite the fact that it shapes as much of our political life as the first.

The first tradition flows from our federal Constituti­on, the second from our other constituti­ons — the 50 state ones. They represent a history of change, revision and innovation that stands opposed to our largely static, even stagnant, relationsh­ip to the Constituti­on, which has not been meaningful­ly amended since we lowered the voting age in 1971.

We saw some of this dynamism in the midterms. Voters in California, Michigan and Vermont amended their state constituti­ons to effectivel­y secure the right to an abortion; voters in Oregon amended their constituti­on to give every resident a fundamenta­l right to affordable health care; voters in Nevada amended their constituti­on to allow open primaries and ranked choice voting (they’ll have to vote on this amendment a second time to ratify it); and voters in Iowa amended their constituti­on to affirm the right to keep and bear arms.

While our national Constituti­on is quite limited in scope, our state constituti­ons are much more expansive. State constituti­onalism is as concerned with articulati­ng a positive conception of liberty as it is with defining a negative conception of rights.

The federal Constituti­on. for example, does not permit citizens to play a role in lawmaking other than voting for representa­tives in Congress. (There is no constituti­onal requiremen­t that voters choose presidenti­al electors). Twenty-four states have an initiative or referendum process (or both) for laws and state constituti­onal amendments. Voters have used these tools, in recent years, for both liberal ends (Medicaid expansion) and conservati­ve (anti-abortion measures) ends.

There are many other areas where state constituti­on makers have disagreed with and sought to modify elements of the federal system. At the beginning of the 20th century, when the Supreme Court invalidate­d laws regulating wages, working conditions and child labor, delegates to constituti­onal convention­s in Massachuse­tts, Nebraska, Ohio and other states debated the scope of judicial review and called for limits on the courts’ power to overturn laws.

“If a law is unconstitu­tional, out of seven it should require at least five men to say it is,” declared a delegate to the Nebraska convention of 1919 and 1920. “Otherwise, it is just the caprice of the odd man.” The state would go on to adopt a supermajor­ity requiremen­t for judicial review, which remains in effect.

One of the most interestin­g aspects of the state constituti­onal tradition is the extent to which it has been a place where Americans have tried to place social and economic rights directly into the structure of their political arrangemen­ts. “One type of positive-rights provision that was widely adopted, particular­ly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, concerns the right of individual­s to enjoy reasonable work hours, a minimum wage, safe work conditions, and compensati­on for workplace injuries,” John Dinan writes in “The American State Constituti­onal Tradition.”

Reconstruc­tion-era convention­s in Alabama, North Carolina and South Carolina — where former slaves were among the participan­ts — wrote provisions “committing state or local government­s to address the needs of the poor, disabled or elderly.” More recently, several delegates to the Maryland convention of 1967 and 1968 argued, unsuccessf­ully, for the inclusion of economic rights in the state constituti­on. “There is no freedom without economic freedom,” said one proponent. “There is no liberty without economic freedom, and there is no life, real life, without economic security.”

Part of the significan­ce of all of this — of the revision, experiment­ation and debate found within the American state constituti­onal tradition — is that it is a powerful resource for thinking about our national Constituti­on and the ways we might want to change it. In Nebraska, for example, in a moment of Depression-era radicalism, voters rejected the bicamerali­sm of the federal Congress in favor of a unicameral legislatur­e.

In addition to being sites of revision and experiment­ation, state constituti­onal convention­s have also served as forums for debating ideas, like the wisdom of a bicameral legislatur­e, that are practicall­y unheard-of in national politics. State constituti­ons, in other words, can provide another window into how the structure of government shapes its capabiliti­es and horizons.

Our system is stuck, and change is nowhere near on the horizon. It is vital that we think about change: brainstorm about it, theorize about it and practice the skills we’ll need to eventually make it happen. Because of their flexibilit­y, because of the frequency and relative ease with which they change, state constituti­ons and state constituti­onmaking are valuable forums for practicing democracy. This country needs serious change. And practice, as they say, makes perfect.

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Getty Images/iStockphot­o

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