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Unsuccessful attempts to amend the U.S. Constitution

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The United States Constitution has been amended 27 times since the Constitution was ratified in 1787. Far more proposals to amend the country's supreme law are unsuccessful.

Up to 200 amendments are typically proposed in Congress each term. But only 33 such proposals in U.S. history (including the 27 that were ratified) have received the two-thirds vote in Congress necessary to present them to the states. The framers intended that it be difficult to change the Constitution, but not so difficult as to render it an inflexible instrument of government. Their prescription drew upon their experience with the Articles of Confederation, which had been America's previous supreme law since 1781, and which required a unanimous vote of 13 states to amend. This unanimity proved impossible to obtain, and the framers therefore laid out a less stringent process for amending the Constitution in Article V.

Amending process

Amending the Constitution is a two-step process: Proposition and Ratification.

Step One: Proposing an amendment

Article V allows for two methods of proposing an amendment: By Congress or by a national convention.

Congressional proposition

A two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress —assuming the presence of a quorum — may approve/propose an amendment. All of the ratified and unratified amendments have been proposed by this method.

National convention

An amendment may also be proposed by a national convention requested (or "applied" for) by legislatures of at least two-thirds of the states. This method, as yet unused, is the national convention method. If the legislatures of two-thirds of the states (currently, 34 of the 50 states) "apply" to Congress for a national convention, Congress is obliged to call the convention.

Some constitutional scholars believe the convention-proposing alternative is dangerous; they maintain that it would have no limits on what could be proposed, and could conceivably offer up an entirely new constitution. They note that the convention which produced the present Constitution was assembled only to amend the Articles of Confederation. Others disagree, saying that a convention would be restricted to the subject for which it was assembled, and that even if the convention could propose any amendment that it wanted, such an amendment would still have to be ratified by three-quarters of the states in order to become valid.

Step Two: Ratification

A proposed amendment must then be ratified. There are two possible methods of ratification, and only Congress may choose which method to use.

Amendments approved by Congress but not ratified by the states

Given that the first four of these unratified amendments are still pending, meaning that they could — however unlikely — still be ratified, Congress initiated the practice in 1917 of placing deadlines on the amendments that it sends to the states for consideration, typically seven years. The only two post-1917 exceptions to this were the Nineteenth Amendment (offered in 1919 and ratified in 1920), and the still-pending, anti-child-labor amendment (offered in 1924). Hence, the D.C. Voting Rights Amendment has expired and cannot be resurrected without either re-passage by Congress, or re-initiation through application by two-thirds of the state legislatures for a convention for the consideration of the amendments, in either case in accordance with Article V. The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), however, technically might still be ratified as the seven year deadline was contained in the resolving clause and not in the body of the proposed amendment itself.

External links

  United States Constitution
Original text: Preamble | Article 1 | Article 2 | Article 3 | Article 4 | Article 5 | Article 6 | Article 7

Amendments: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27


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