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Trump's Dangerous Rewrite Of America's Constitution Can Take All of Your Rights Away

A constitutional convention looms as a Republican-led effort to rewrite foundational U.S. laws, pushing gun rights, abortion bans, and corporate influence. With states' decades-old requests under scrutiny, Democrats fear a "runaway convention" that could reshape the nation's governance. Will it happen? Tell us in the comments. MORE FROM THOM šŸ“ƒ Thom's Hartmann's 'Daily Take' Newsletter: https://HartmannReport.com šŸŽ¦ Watch a full program re-run anytime: https://www.patreon.com/thomhartmann šŸŽ§ Audio Podcast: https://thom.tv FOLLOW THOM šŸ“• AMAZON: https://amzn.to/2hS4UwY šŸ“ DAILY TAKE: https://hartmannreport.com šŸ‘„ FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/ThomHartmannProgram/ šŸ“ø INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/Thom_Hartmann šŸŽ¦ PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/thomhartmann šŸ¦ X: https://www.twitter.com/thom_hartmann Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hartmannreport.com šŸŒ WEBSITE: https://www.thomhartmann.com šŸ“ŗ YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thomhartmann šŸ‘• Merchandise: https://teespring.com/stores/thom-hartmann-program-2 šŸŗ Thom Merchandise: https://teespring.com/thom-hartmann-mug?pid=522&cid=101870 ABOUT THE PROGRAM The Thom Hartmann Program is the leading progressive political talk radio show for political news and comments about Government politics, be it Liberal or Conservative, plus special guests and callers. #MoreFromThom āœ” Amazon links are affiliate links VIDEO TRANSCRIPT Thom: A constitutional conventionā€”this is from The New York Timesā€”is keeping Democrats up at night. The concern is that conservatives, controlling Congress, could control the convention and write all kinds of things into the Constitution. For example, the absolute right to own guns, an absolute ban on abortion, declaring that corporations are people, and that money given to politicians is free speech, not bribery. Other proposals include requiring a two-thirds vote of Congress to raise taxes, while allowing spending cuts with a simple majority. Thereā€™s also the push for a balanced budget amendment, which, if unmet, would trigger cuts to Social Security and Medicare. These are all things Republicans have proposed in the past. There are two ways to amend the Constitution. The first starts in Congress with two-thirds of the House and Senate, followed by approval from three-quarters of the states. This is how every constitutional amendment has passed. But thereā€™s also the Article 5 convention. Thereā€™s a groupā€”fairly well fundedā€”called Convention of States. You can see more at conventionofstates.com. This group, backed by some very wealthy people, has been working for years to bring about an Article 5 convention. They need 34 states to sign on, and Republican lawyers believe theyā€™ve already hit that number. Their argument? If a state ever called for a constitutional convention or even for a constitutional amendmentā€”no matter how long agoā€”that call could count. By that logic, they claim they already have 34 states. If Republicans control the House and Senate, and with Trump signing off, they could call a convention and start rewriting the Constitution as soon as next month. According to The New York Times, California Democratic State Senator Scott Wienerā€”who represents San Franciscoā€”introduced legislation yesterday to rescind the stateā€™s seven active calls for a constitutional convention. Some of these calls date back decades. He said: ā€œThereā€™s a strong possibility of a runaway convention. I do not want California to inadvertently trigger a constitutional convention that ends up shredding the Constitution.ā€ Jodey Arrington, a hardcore right-wing Republican from West Texas and chairman of the House Budget Committee, is leading this effort in the House. He believes they now have enough states. Since 2016ā€”the year Trump was first electedā€”nine states with Democratic-controlled legislatures have been concerned enough to rescind their decades-old requests for constitutional amendments. They fear opening the door for a Republican-led Congress and state legislatures to pursue a conservative revision of the laws underpinning national governance. Following last monthā€™s elections, 28 state legislatures are controlled by Republicans. Meanwhile, The New York Times points out that 34 states appear to have standing requests to change the Constitution, some dating back more than 150 years. Donald Trumpā€™s rationale for calling a constitutional convention is to undo birthright citizenship. He wants to make it so that both parents must be U.S. citizens for a child to be granted citizenship. Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California, Berkeley School of Lawā€”one of Americaā€™s top constitutional scholarsā€”says these concerns are very legitimate. Chemerinsky, who wrote a book about the Constitution, has been warning about this for years. (Continues)

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