If we overeulogize the Founders and make them seem so brilliant and California's "new Madisons" so dim by comparison, it's kind of a setup for saying a constitutional convention in California will probably fail.
A constitutional convention has been proposed by some California business leaders as a vehicle to fix the Golden State's
deeply entrenched political and economic woes. While a convention offers the
hope of a new beginning, it also inspires understandable fear that hard won
rights may get trampled in the horse-trading.
The state's leadership in recent years has hardly inspired
confidence.
Why should we imagine that it could match the brilliance of James
Madison, George Washington and the other Founders, and chart a new course for
our state?
The first thing to recognize is that the Founders were not
as brilliant as the mythmakers would have us believe. Their initial design of
government - the Articles of Confederation - was a timid attempt at national
governance, more dysfunctional than California's
government today.
To their credit, once they realized their design had
faltered, they were bold enough not merely to tinker around the edges. They had
the courage to fix their eyes on a new horizon, completely redesigning their
existing governmental structures to create Version2.0,which became an
inspiration to the world.
But birthing a new form of government did not occur without
labor pains.During the Constitutional Convention of 1787in Philadelphia,
scholars such as Yale University's Robert Dahl have shown, the Constitution was
hashed out by delegates who were thoroughly confused and at times beyond their
depth. The meandering trail of proposals for electing the president, for
example, revealed a divided and fumbling body.
Starting in mid-May 1787, the delegates debated several
different methods for months, changing their minds incessantly and finding no
consensus.
On three occasions during July, the delegates voted for the
selection of the president by "the national legislature" - what we
know today as a British-type parliamentary system.
But apparently this proposal didn't satisfy, so over a hot,
muggy August, other proposals from subcommittees were thrust forward and
defeated. As late as Aug. 24, despite mounting pressures to complete their work
and return home, the delegates still had not settled upon a final proposal for
electing the president. Running out of time, the delegates turned the dilemma
over to yet another committee.
By Sept. 4, this committee recommended a solution the
delegates already had rejected - that the executive be chosen by electors
appointed by state legislatures. Two days later, they tweaked the proposal yet
again, so that instead of the state legislatures automatically appointing the
electors, legislatures were allowed to choose the method for selecting the
electors - the practice we still use today.
Finally the weary delegates, who had been meeting by that
time for nearly four months, away from hearth and kin, adopted this compromise
with nine states in favor and two opposed. Ten days later, the Constitution was
signed and the convention adjourned.
To observers like Dahl, what the torturous record of proposals
and counterproposals suggests is a group of baffled, confused, even floundering
men who settled on a solution more out of desperation than confidence.
Like the formation of the Senate, the American method of
choosing the president was not founded on constitutional theory, high principle
or brilliant design. The Founders simply ran out of time and ideas.
It's important to emphasize the confusion - rather than the
brilliance - that reigned at the Constitutional Convention for a few reasons.
One, it shows that designing anew system involves uncertainty and a degree of
bewilderment, no matter how talented the people in the room. If we overeulogize
the Founders and make them seem so brilliant and California's
"new Madisons" so dim by comparison,
it's kind of a setup for saying a constitutional convention in California will probably
fail.
Second, if we recognize that the Founders were not so
brilliant after all, or at least were quite confused amid their brilliance -
yet they plunged forward anyway - that is a far more powerful message for us to
ponder. It means they courageously enacted substantive overhaul of their key
institutions despite their lack of clarity and consensus over what the final
product would be. They didn't just tinker around the edges because they had the
certainty that the status quo was no longer acceptable.
That should give Californians the fortitude to know that,
while we may not be completely clear on where we are going, like the Founders,
we can be clear that we must push forward nonetheless. We should be emboldened
to think outside the usual boxes, putting on the table substantive reforms like
proportional representation, a unicameral legislature, lowering the two- thirds
threshold for enacting budgets and taxes, and more.
While it may not be obvious right now who are California's
Madisons, Adamses and Jeffersons, it would be a mistake to underestimate what
California's leaders might be capable of producing if we dare to try.
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