Why is the US Constitution so hard to amend Peter Paccone

When it was ratified in 1789,

the U.S. Constitution didn’t just
institute a government by the people.

It provided a way for the people to alter
the constitution itself.

And yet, of the nearly 11,000 amendments
proposed in the centuries since,

only 27 have succeeded as of 2016.

So what is it that makes the Constitution
so hard to change?

In short, its creators.

The founders of the United States
were trying to create a unified country

from thirteen different colonies,

which needed assurance that their
agreements couldn’t be easily undone.

So here’s what they decided.

For an amendment to even be proposed,

it must receive
a two-thirds vote of approval

in both houses of Congress,

or a request from two-thirds
of state legislatures

to call a national convention,

and that’s just the first step.

To actually change the Constitution,

the amendment must be ratified
by three-quarters of all states.

To do this, each state can either have
its legislature vote on the amendment,

or it can hold a separate
ratification convention

with delegates elected by voters.

The result of such high thresholds

is that, today,
the American Constitution is quite static.

Most other democracies pass amendments
every couple of years.

The U.S., on the other hand,
hasn’t passed one since 1992.

At this point, you may wonder how any
amendments managed to pass at all.

The first ten,
known as the Bill of Rights,

includes some of America’s
most well-known freedoms,

such as the freedom of speech,

and the right to a fair trial.

These were passed all at once

to resolve some conflicts from
the original Constitutional Convention.

Years later, the Thirteenth Amendment,
which abolished slavery,

as well as the Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendments,

only passed after a bloody civil war.

Ratifying amendments
has also become harder

as the country has grown larger
and more diverse.

The first ever proposed amendment,

a formula to assign
congressional representatives,

was on the verge of ratification
in the 1790s.

However, as more and more states
joined the union,

the number needed to reach
the three-quarter mark increased as well,

leaving it unratified to this day.

Today, there are many
suggested amendments,

including outlawing
the burning of the flag,

limiting congressional terms,

or even repealing the Second Amendment.

While many enjoy strong support,
their likelihood of passing is slim.

Americans today are the most politically
polarized since the Civil War,

making it nearly impossible to reach
a broad consensus.

In fact, the late Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia

once calculated that due to America’s
representative system of government,

it could take as little as 2% of the total
population to block an amendment.

Of course, the simplest solution would be
to make the Constitution easier to amend

by lowering the thresholds required
for proposal and ratification.

That, however, would require
its own amendment.

Instead, historical progress has mainly
come from the U.S. Supreme Court,

which has expanded its interpretation
of existing constitutional laws

to keep up with the times.

Considering that Supreme Court justices
are unelected

and serve for life once appointed,

this is far from
the most democratic option.

Interestingly, the founders themselves
may have foreseen this problem early on.

In a letter to James Madison,

Thomas Jefferson wrote
that laws should expire every 19 years

rather than having to be changed
or repealed

since every political process
is full of obstacles

that distort the will of the people.

Although he believed

that the basic principles
of the Constitution would endure,

he stressed that the Earth belongs
to the living,

and not to the dead.