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A Republic, If You Can Keep It

Published in Blog on September 27, 2024 by Hunter Oswald

On September 18, 1787, James McHenry, one of the Maryland delegates during the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, wrote about an exchange between Mrs. Eliza Powell and Benjamin Franklin. During this exchange, Mrs. Powell asked Franklin, “Well, doctor, what we have we got a republic or monarchy?” Franklin replied, “A republic if you can keep it.”

Franklin’s words to Mrs. Powell have been used to stress the importance that citizens have a duty to be our Constitution’s guardians. Now fast forward 234 years from 1787 to 2021, where our Constitution, for the past one hundred years, has been under constant attack by foreign influences and domestic self-interests.

Americans have tried many peaceful methods to stop these influences, but these methods have ended with further enablement and expansion of these influences. While many have lost hope and even more others have begun to follow suit, the Framers gave us a tool which would provide us with an ability that could save our Constitution: a convention of states outlined in Article V of the US Constitution.

Many might be wondering what a Convention of States is. Article V of the Constitution provides two mechanisms for amending the Constitution. One method is through the passage of 2/3rds vote from both the US House of Representatives and US Senate to then be approved by 3/4ths of state legislatures.  

The other method per Article V is through 2/3rds of the states calling for a “Convention for proposing Amendments,” which would also have to be ratified by 3/4ths of the nation’s state legislatures. The Framers created the Convention of States to be a way to bypass Congress and allow the states to make constitutional changes, particularly should other mechanisms to limit the federal government’s power fail.

This brings us to the question: why do we need a convention of states? For the past one hundred years, the federal government has become larger and more invasive through the ever-increasing powers of our institutions which has resulted in deep corruption and consolidation of power in D.C.

The cure to this is through an Article V Convention of States, where amendments for term limits, balanced budget, state legislatures' right to choose senators, and repeal of the income tax can finally be presented and ratified by the states. These infractions cannot be solved by Congress, but only through the strength and determination of the American people and their state legislatures.

Already several state and federal politicians, along with prominent figures in America, have supported the Convention of States movement such as Mark Levin, Senator Marco Rubio, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, former U.S Secretary of HUD Ben Carson, Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, and many others.

With the ever-increasing support for Convention of States growing amongst everyday Americans, politicians, and prominent figures, the American people now have the opportunity to save our Constitution from the clutches of tyranny and oppression.

I encourage Americans to become part of the movement by contacting your state legislatures, promoting convention of states in your area, educating others about convention of states, and by going to the Convention of States website.

Benjamin Franklin, when contemplating Washington’s chair that had a sun on it during the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, said, “I have often … in the course of the session … looked at that sun behind the President without being able to tell whether it was rising or setting. But now at length I have the happiness to know it is a rising and not a setting sun.” Now I ask you, are we witnessing a setting sun or a rising one?

 

Reposted with permission from the author. Original piece can be found in the October 6, 2021 issue of Cogitare Magazine: https://cogitaremag.com/?p=761.

Hunter Oswald is a volunteer with Convention of States Action in Ohio.

Learn more about Convention of States at www.ConventionofStates.com

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