I mentioned a few weeks ago that some of the less-sane members of the GOP base are openly considering a [tag]constitutional convention[/tag] because of the Senate’s failure to pass an [tag]amendment[/tag] banning [tag]gay marriage[/tag]. Unfortunately, talk of such a ridiculous idea seems to be increasing, not decreasing.
Two weeks ago, the far-right Family Research Council hosted a meeting of “the top leaders of the marriage movement — Catholic, Protestant and Mormon leaders among others — [who] discussed the possibility of an unprecedented Constitutional Convention.” Yesterday, Bob Novak reported that the campaign is beginning, in earnest, including possible appeals to state legislatures.
The provision of the Constitution’s Article V requiring such a convention if called by two-thirds of the state legislatures has never been used. Fear of throwing the Constitution open to general amendment has overridden support for specific issues. However, key advocates of barring gay marriages think the constitutional convention strategy will keep the issue alive.
A recent memo circulated within the anti-gay marriage coalition lists Princeton Professor Robby George, Tony Perkins and Chuck Donovan of the Family Research Council, and conservative financial consultant Frank Cannon as favoring the strategy.
I still find it hard to believe any serious person would even raise the possibility of a constitutional convention with a straight face, but here we are, nearly a month after the New York Sun first reported on the issue. Instead of watching these guys get laughed off the stage, discussions about how to proceed are underway. It’s genuinely breathtaking.
For what it’s worth, Article V explains that two-thirds of state legislatures (34) can bypass Congress and call for nationwide constitutional convention. There, lawmakers can propose any amendments they want, and those backed by three-quarters of legislatures become part of the Constitution.
The odds of any of this moving forward are next to nothing, but the fact that some major conservative groups are actively discussing and plotting strategy on the idea says a great deal about just how radical the conservative movement has become.