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Why is the US Constitution so hard to amend? - Peter Paccone

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    When it was ratified in 1789,
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    the U.S. Constitution didn't just
    institute a government by the people.
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    It provided a way for the people to alter
    the constitution itself.
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    And yet, of the nearly 11,000 amendments
    proposed in the centuries since,
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    only 27 have succeeded as of 2016.
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    So what is it that makes the Constitution
    so hard to change?
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    In short, its creators.
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    The founders of the United States
    were trying to create a unified country
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    from thirteen different colonies,
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    which needed assurance that their
    agreements couldn't be easily undone.
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    So here's what they decided.
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    For an amendment to even by proposed,
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    it must receive
    a two-thirds vote of approval
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    in both Houses of Congress,
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    or a request from two-thirds
    of state legislatures
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    to call a national convention,
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    and that's just the first step.
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    To actually change the Constitution,
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    the amendment must be ratified
    by three-quarters of all states.
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    To do this, each state can either have
    its legislature vote on the amendment,
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    or it can hold a separate
    ratification convention
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    with delegates elected by voters.
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    The result of such high thresholds
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    is that today,
    the American Constitution is quite static.
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    Most other democracies pass amendments
    every couple of years.
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    The U.S., on the other hand,
    hasn't passed one since 1992.
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    At this point, you may wonder how any
    amendments managed to pass at all.
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    The first ten,
    known as the Bill of Rights,
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    includes some of America's
    most well-known freedoms,
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    such as the freedom of speech,
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    and the right to a fair trial.
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    These were passed all at once
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    to resolve some conflicts from
    the original Constitutional Convention.
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    Years later, the Thirteenth Amendment,
    which abolished slavery,
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    as well as the Fourteenth
    and Fifteenth Amendments,
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    only passed after a bloody civil war.
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    Ratifying amendments
    has also become harder
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    as the country has grown larger
    and more diverse.
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    The first ever proposed amendment,
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    a formula to assign
    congressional representatives,
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    was on the verge of ratification
    in the 1790s.
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    However, as more and more states
    joined the union,
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    the number needed to reach
    the three-quarter mark increased as well,
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    leaving it unratified to this day.
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    Today, there are many
    suggested amendments,
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    including outlawing
    the burning of the flag,
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    limiting congressional terms,
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    or even repealing the Second Amendment.
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    While many enjoy strong support,
    their likelihood of passing is slim.
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    Americans today are the most politically
    polarized since the Civil War,
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    making it nearly impossible to reach
    a broad consensus.
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    In fact, the late Supreme Court Justice
    Antonin Scalia
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    once calculated that due to America's
    representative system of government,
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    it could take as little as 2% of the total
    population to block an amendment.
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    Of course, the simplest solution would be
    to make the Constitution easier to amend
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    by lowering the thresholds required
    for proposal and ratification.
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    That, however, would require
    its own amendment.
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    Instead, historical progress has mainly
    come from the U.S. Supreme Court,
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    which has expanded its interpretation
    of existing constitutional laws
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    to keep up with the times.
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    Considering that Supreme Court Justices
    are unelected
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    and serve for life once appointed,
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    this is far from
    the most democratic option.
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    Interestingly, the founders themselves
    may have foreseen this problem early on.
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    In a letter to James Madison,
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    Thomas Jefferson wrote
    that laws should expire every 19 years
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    rather than having to be changed
    or repealed
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    since every political process
    is full of obstacles
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    that distort the will of the people.
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    Although he believed
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    that the basic principles
    of the Constitution would endure,
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    he stressed that the Earth belongs
    to the living,
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    and not to the dead.
Title:
Why is the US Constitution so hard to amend? - Peter Paccone
Speaker:
Peter Paccone
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:18

English subtitles

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