The Oklahoma Legislature is considering HB 2299, a deceptive bill intended to give state legislators false confidence in a disastrous Article V constitutional convention — a first step toward deceiving them into applying for a convention.
Contact your state legislators
Please help stop HB 2299 by contacting your state legislators. Urge them to oppose an Article V constitutional convention and to vote against all bills or resolutions calling for one. Inform them of the dangers of a Con-Con and of the benefits of using nullification instead.
URGENT: The Oklahoma Legislature is considering a deceptive bill intended to give state legislators false confidence in a disastrous Article V constitutional convention — a first step toward deceiving them into applying for a convention. Please contact your state legislators, and urge them to oppose these bills.
House Bill No. 2299 (HB 2299), titled the “Dr. Tom Coburn Act,” has been introduced. It seeks to regulate the conduct of delegates (labeled “commissioners” in the bill) to prevent a runaway convention. This bill would be completely useless at preventing a runaway convention — for example, it doesn’t regulate delegates from other states, and doesn’t prevent delegates from proposing an entirely new constitution (in the 1787 Convention, states also attempted to limit delegates’ authority). The bills would merely create a false sense of security that a convention will not get out of control.
When speaking to your legislators, emphasize the following irrefutable facts about an Article V convention for proposing amendments:
Any Article V convention could lead to a runaway convention reversing many of the Constitution’s limitations on government power and interference. In other words, a Con-Con could accomplish the same goals that many of its advocates claim to be fighting against. As evidence, both a 2016 and 2023 simulated “Convention of States” resulted in amendments massively increasing the federal government and expanding its spending powers.
The late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia understood the danger of a constitutional convention. In 2015, Scalia reiterated his opposition to an Article V convention, stating “this is not a good century to write a constitution.” Furthermore, what kind of delegates would Oklahoma send to such a convention? Constitutionalist conservatives or RINO moderates and liberals?
In 1979, then-U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, correctly warned about an Article V convention:
If we hold a constitutional convention, every group in the country — majority, minority, middle-of-the-road, left, right, up, down — is going to get its two bits in and we are going to wind up with a constitution that will be so far different from the one we have lived under for 200 years that I doubt that the Republic could continue.
Goldwater considered an Article V Convention threatening to the continuity of the United States’ republican form of government. It would be foolhardy and downright reckless to disregard these and other legitimate concerns.
An Article V convention possesses the inherent power to propose any changes to the U.S. Constitution, including drafting and proposing an entirely new “modern” (i.e. socialist) constitution. Instead, the Oklahoma Legislature should consider Article VI and nullify unconstitutional laws.
Furthermore, state lawmakers should also consider rescinding any and all previously passed Article V convention applications to Congress, regardless of the desired amendment(s). Passing rescission resolutions will help prevent aggregating past Article V convention applications with those from other states to force Congress to call a convention.
Above all, urge your state representative and senator to oppose HB 2299 and all other pro-Article V convention legislation and to instead consider nullification as a safe and constitutional means to limit government.