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AP®︎/College US Government and Politics
Course: AP®︎/College US Government and Politics > Unit 1
Lesson 5: Ratification of the US Constitution- The Constitutional Convention
- Constitutional compromises: The Electoral College
- Constitutional compromises: The Three-Fifths Compromise
- The impact of constitutional compromises on us today
- The Constitution of the United States
- Article V and the amendment process
- Article V of the Constitution
- Article VI of the Constitution
- Article VII of the Constitution
- Ratification of the US Constitution: lesson overview
- Ratification of the US Constitution
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Article V of the Constitution
Article 5 of the U.S. Constitution outlines the process for amending the Constitution. It's a tough task requiring strong consensus. Amendments can start in Congress or through state legislatures. However, it's rare for changes to occur, with only 27 amendments ratified so far. The Constitution's flexibility for future changes shows the framers' foresight.
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- Why do we get the same amount of points no matter how long the video is.(3 votes)
- what are the advantages and disadvantages of making it difficult to amend a constitution?(1 vote)
- An advantage would be that power wouldn't be easily abused to amend the Constitution in someones favor, like giving them the advantage in government. However, this also makes it hard to pass necessary amendment that would have been more effective had they been implemented earlier.(2 votes)
- whats the difference from congress and state legislative?(1 vote)
- Congress is the national legislature, having legislative power over the entire country.
The state legislatures have power over their specific states to pass laws, as long as those laws do not contradict any created by Congress.
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- An advantage would be that power wouldn't be easily abused to amend the Constitution in someones favor, like giving them the advantage in government. However, this also makes it hard to pass necessary amendment that would have been more effective had they been implemented earlier.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Hey, this
is Kim from Khan Academy and today I'm learning about Article five of the U.S. Constitution, which describes The
Constitution's amendment process. To learn more about Article
five, I talked to two experts, professor Michael Rappaport,
who is the Darling Foundation professor at the University
of San Diego School of Law, where he also serves as the director of The Center for the Study
of Constitutional Originalism and David Strauss, who's the Gerald Ratner distinguished service professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School and author of The Living Constitution. Professor Strauss, Article
five provides this process for amending The Constitution, can you take us through
that process a little bit? How does it work? - [Professor Strauss]
Well the quick description of the process is it's really hard, it's really hard to
amend The Constitution. There are actually a couple
of different processes that are laid out in Article five but only one has ever been used. An amendment starts in Congress and two thirds of each house of Congress, two thirds in House of Representatives and two thirds of the Senate
has to approved the amendment and then it goes to the states and three quarters of the states have to approve the
amendment, so you have to have a really strong consensus in order to get The Constitution changed that way. - [Kim] So, Professor Rappaport, take us through this process
of amending The Constitution. Why did the framers set it up this way? - [Professor Rappaport] The framers gave a good bit of thought to coming up with an amendment process
because they recognized that The Constitution might
need to be changed over time either 'cause there were problems with it that weren't anticipated
or because circumstances or values changed, so, there are two steps to the amendment process, for an amendment to go into The Constitution to become part of The Constitution it has to
be both proposed and ratified. On the proposal side,
the Congress can propose, alternatively, a proposal can come from the action of the state legislatures, so, two thirds of the
state legislatures say we'd like to have a
Constitutional Convention propose an amendment, so,
there's two parts to that, obviously, the the state legislatures have got to want it and
then you get the calling of a Constitutional Convention. Okay, that's the proposal side, there's also the ratification side, which is a little bit simpler. You need three quarters of the states to ratify a Constitutional amendment and they can ratify it either through the actions of
the state legislatures or the actions of state conventions, which are special bodies
which would be elected in order to decide one
question, whether or not to ratify that proposed
Constitutional amendment. - [Kim] This is fascinating, so, I actually had no idea
about the two thirds of the state legislatures being able to propose a Constitutional amendment. How often does that happen? - [Professor Rappaport]
It has never occurred throughout our history,
although, a couple of times there were actions taken to
sort of move in that direction but we've never actually had
a Constitutional Convention that has proposed any amendments. It's important to go into why the framers would have set up the
system the way they did. The most usual situation
is for the Congress to propose the amendments
and that's happened in all of the 27 amendments
which have been ratified to become part of our Constitution but what happens if the
Congress is the problem? What happens if the
Congress is usurping power or they're standing in the way of changes that are important or
they need to be reformed? You can't count on the
Congress to wanna reform itself so what they did was to have
this alternative mechanism which would bypass the Congress and that alternative mechanism was the Constitutional Convention, so the state legislatures
proposed, applied for, and the separate entity, the
Constitutional Convention, makes a proposal, so
they were quite explicit in discussing this, that they wanted this as an alternative to the Congress. - [Kim] So was this on purpose that they made it very difficult to amend The Constitution? - [Professor Strauss] Well
it sure seems like it. Now, of course, we don't know back then what they had in mind,
whether they thought, "Well, the House, the Senate, the states, "they'll sort of be all run
by the same kind of people "and they'll kind of agree on things." Maybe they thought
that, we just don't know but whatever they were
thinking, what they gave us was a very difficult
process to get through. - [Kim] So, how long
was it from the period when The Constitution was first ratified to the first amendment to The Constitution beyond the Bill of Rights? - [Professor Rappaport] Okay, so, the first 10 amendments
were ratified in 1791 and then, just a mere three years later, we had the 11th amendment. - [Professor Strauss] There
was an 11th amendment in 1798 to correct really kind
of a technical problem that the Supreme Court did something that the framers really
didn't anticipate it would do, didn't want it to do,
and the 11th amendment was adopted to correct that. The 12th amendment was adopted in 1804, after the, really, kind of a disaster in the election of 1800,
when there was a tie in the electoral college,
the framers had not foreseen the rise of political parties and political parties made the system for electing the president
they had given us very difficult to work with
but then there was nothing. That was 1804, then there was nothing until after the Civil War
and after the Civil War there were three amendments,
then nothing again, really, until the progressive
era in the early 20th century when there were, again,
a bunch of amendments and then after then, things
have sort of tailed off. So, we really see these kind
of waves in our history. - [Kim] What do you think
brings those waves on? Why are there some eras
where there are lots of Constitutional amendments
and then other eras when there's nothing? - [Professor Strauss] Well, Kim, here I'm gonna say something
I think some people will disagree with but, you
know, but I think it's right and that is that I don't think the process of amending The
Constitution has really been the way we actually change it. I think what happens is just because the amendment process is so difficult, we've worked out other
ways of changing things and so amendments come along, sometimes, because a change has already happened and people decide, "Well, let's put it "in The Constitution
just so we can kinda have "official recognition of it." But a lot of time changes happen and they are a little
bit too controversial to get into The Constitution
but they seem pretty solid and pretty secure, so, we just don't, I guess it's fair to say,
don't bother to amend The Constitution or don't
wanna go through the process of amending The Constitution. - [Professor Rappaport]
Very often peoples' values may change or they may differ from what's in The Constitution and it may take a time or circumstances may finally occur that crystallize this desire to change The Constitution and all of a sudden the
opportunity is there and people can suddenly pass
a Constitutional amendment. It's only gonna occur
during certain circumstances especially when there's
strong support for it. - [Kim] Very interesting,
yeah, so it's unlikely that we're gonna have a
Constitutional amendment anytime in the near future. When was the last
Constitutional amendment? - [Professor Rappaport] So,
the simple answer to that was in 1971 we got the 26th amendment that was both proposed
and then, remarkably, it's an all time record, proposed and ratified in
three months and eight days and that was the amendment
that guaranteed the right to vote of 18 year olds. - [Kim] Ah, right, so
sort of as a response to the Vietnam War? - [Professor Rappaport] Yes, yes but there actually has been
one additional amendment, the 27th amendment, right, so why isn't that the most recent one? Well, here's the funny thing about it, the 27th amendment was proposed as part of the original Bill of Rights in 1789, so this amendment was proposed in 1789, ratified in 1992, so it took 202 years. - [Kim] What you're saying,
what's the 27th amendment about? - [Professor Rappaport]
That has to do with congressional salary increases. It basically says if Congress
wants to raise its own salary, the increase can't take effect
until the next election, so it basically give the
voters a chance to say, "Hey, we don't like what you did, "we're gonna vote you out of office "for increasing your salary." - [Kim] So, one thing
that strikes me about Article five or just the
fact that the founders included an amendment process altogether, it seems very humble and farsighted to include a way for the document itself to evolve in a way, do you think that the framers
approached The Constitution with the idea that there
were things in the future that they just wouldn't
be able to anticipate? - [Professor Strauss] They had before them and were acutely aware of a history in which efforts to establish
governments had failed and they were really
trying to work with that and make sure they
didn't do the same thing so they knew what a hard
job they were embarking on and they made it clear, I mean, there's a famous passage in
which James Madison said, "Look, we know a lot of these provisions "that we're writing in The Constitution "their meaning is
unclear and their meaning "will have to be history's liquidated." Which is to say, people have to figure out what this means because we
know what we're giving you is unclear in some
ways, so, yes absolutely they knew there were things
they could not anticipate. The framers themselves
weren't in agreement on what freedom of speech means, you know, some of them enacted and voted for and got enacted laws
that restricted speech in ways that we would
find intolerable today, we'd say they violate the first amendment but here you have some of the guys who drafted the first amendment
voting for those laws. - [Kim] So, near the end of Article five, there's this kind of
long-winded clause that says, "No amendment which may
be made prior to the year "one thousand eight hundred and eight "shall in any manner affect
the first and fourth clauses "in the ninth section
of the first article." Now, if I'm cross
referencing this correctly, what they're really saying here is, you can't make amendments about slavery, so why is this here and why are they talking around it so obliquely? - [Professor Rappaport] The
interesting thing about this is what do they do, they basically said, for 20 years there's not
going to be any amendments that are going to speak to the slave trade and The Constitution is
very, let us say shy, about using the term slavery
or referring to slavery, it actually never refers
to the term slave, there's a variety of thoughts
about what was going on but one very common view about this is that The Constitution was sort
of a little bit embarrassed, that the framers were a
little bit embarrassed, or at least some of the framers were embarrassed about it
and so they didn't wanna make reference to it too explicitly. - [Professor Strauss] They might've been a little bit worried about
what the verdict of history would be, so, they knew on some level this sort of immorality of slavery but there it is, right
there in Article five and there are other places
in The Constitution too where they don't use the
word but what they're doing is protecting slavery. And they did add these
amendments to The Constitution about slavery and about, as you say, equal citizenship and
voting but, you know, the 14th amendment
providing equal citizenship, that was pretty much
nullified in most respects for a large part of our history, states found a way to get around that. The 15th amendment was also something that was just not very effective in preventing African Americans from being denied the vote and, yes, there are
provisions in The Constitution that are there and you can evoke them and you can rely on them
but if you just look at the text of The
Constitution, I think you get a misleading impression
about how The Constitution in our history has actually worked. - [Kim] This is a very good point because I think one of the
hardest things for students of U.S history to understand is how is it possible that
after the 14th amendment was passed, things like Jim Crow happened and I guess the answer is The Constitution is only in force if it's enforced. - [Professor Strauss] Yeah,
Kim, that's exactly right. It's words on a page, you know, the text is fine, it can
say all the right things but the institutions and the popular will have to be in place to make
something of those fine words. - [Kim] Interesting, so how do you think our government might be different if The Constitution didn't include this amendment process? - [Professor Strauss] I
don't think it would've been that different just because
Article five gives us such a hard process to go through just because it's so hard
to amend The Constitution, we figured out other ways
to change The Constitution in practice, even if the
words on the page are the same and I think if there were no Article five, we would've found a way to get to where wanted to get to as a country by those needs, by legislation, by presidential action,
by Supreme Court decision, and just by the people
in their lives saying, "You know, we need to
go in this direction, "we need to go, say, in the
direction of women's equality." And, by the way, there's no amendment giving women equal rights either but that's where we've gotten to and I think that would've been the pattern if there were no formal amendment process. - [Professor Rappaport]
There's a second way in which you can have
Constitutional change, which is you could simply say, "Alright, this Constitution
was pretty good for awhile, "it's now outlived its usefulness, "let's have a new Constitution." That would seem like a very
radical, big thing to do, virtually no on proposes
that at the federal level but in the states, lots
of states have changed their constitutions, not simply passed a Constitutional amendment,
but just gotten rid of a whole constitution
and adopted a new one. That's happened many times and, so, if we didn't have a
Constitutional amendment process, it's quite possible that that's exactly what we would've seen
at the federal level. - [Kim] Wow, this is really fascinating because we really think a lot about what the framers intended, you know, for certain amendments,
for example, you know, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, what did they really mean by those things but if we had just kind of
every now and again said, "Okay, we're done with that,
let's do a new Constitution," we wouldn't necessarily have that debate, we'd just say, "Okay, this is
what we meant at the time." - [Professor Rappaport]
Famously Thomas Jefferson said, "Oh, you know, it's
really not right to have "a Constitution that's
going to continue over time "and bind future generations and, so, "we ought to have a new
Constitution every 19 years "when there's a new generation." And his close friend, James Madison, had to disagree with
him and basically said, "Look, I understand why you're saying that "but you also have to realize
the incredible disruption "that would cause every 20 years, "people wouldn't be able to
rely on the existing rights "that are in The Constitution
'cause they would know "in a certain period of time
new ones would be enacted." We had that debate,
Madison won in the sense that the U.S. Constitution
is supposed to last for a long-term period,
there's no 20 year limit on it, and one of the things
that's been beneficial for the United States as a result of that is that we've inherited
these Constitutional rights that people have a lot of reverence for. - [Kim] So, we've learned
that there are two ways to amend The Constitution,
through Congress or through a special
Constitutional Convention called by the states, either way, adding an amendment to The Constitution is really difficult to do, so much so, that the American people have only in special circumstances used
a Constitutional amendment to affect social or political change. To learn more about Article five, visit the National Constitution Center's interactive Constitution
and Khan Academy's resources on U.S. government and politics.