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Rhode Island Contact ONE Rep to RESCIND Art. V



Rhode Island:

We have a bill to rescind all previous Article V

Constitutional Conventions.

 

Please CONTACT: Representative Corvese

To support H7792 which Rescinds All Previous

Article V Constitutional Conventions

 

He needs to hear your concerns about how an Article V Convention would put the Second Amendment in Jeopardy.

 

MESSAGE: Please support H7792 which rescinds all previous applications for an Article V Constitutional Amendments Convention. The Convention agenda cannot be limited and our fundamental rights like the Right to Keep and Bear Arms could be jeopardized in an Article V Convention. (Or better yet write your own message.) More information below.

 

Representative Corvese

(401) 222-1591

rep-corvese@rilegislature.gov

 

Text of H7792: https://webserver.rilegislature.gov/BillText26/HouseText26/H7792.pdf 

 

More Information:

Eagle Forum National Constitutional Issues

Chairman Janine Hansen

info@eagleforum.orgjanine@janinehansen.com www.eagleforum.org 775-397-6859

 

An Article V Convention Cannot be Limited: Phyllis Schlafly, the founder of Eagle Forum, often quoted Chief Justice Warren Burger as the highest authority to ever speak out on a Constitutional Convention. He stated: “I have also repeatedly given my opinion that there is no effective way to limit or muzzle the action of a Constitutional Convention. The Convention could make its own rules and set its own agenda. Congress might try to limit the Convention to one amendment or to one issue, but there is no way to assure that the Convention would obey. After a Convention is convened, it would be too late to stop the convention if we don’t like the agenda.” In addition, in 2015 the New Jersey Law Journal reported that former Supreme Court Justice “Scalia called it a ‘horrible idea’ to hold a constitutional convention in this age of special interests.”

 

Jeopardize our Fundamental Rights: In September of 2023 California passed an Article V application which would have completely gutted the Second Amendment. Although in 2025 California rescinded all previous applications for Article V Constitutional Conventions, it does not diminish California’s anti-Second Amendment agenda. Knowing that all 50 states will participate in any Article V Constitutional Convention, we can anticipate that all the well-funded anti-Second Amendment organizations will be there supporting California’s anti-Second Amendment agenda and lobbying to take away our fundamental Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Other rights such as religious liberty and free speech could also be in jeopardy.

 

Large Population States will Control the Convention: Since the Articles of Confederation were superseded by the U.S. Constitution, representation has always been according to the Great Compromise. Each state has two U.S. Senators and the House of Representatives is based on population, just like the Electoral College. This is the formula the U.S. Senate and House used in their proposed procedural bills for an Article V Convention. This precludes the one state one vote argument promoted by convention advocates. What it would mean is that Rhode Island would have 4 votes in a Convention and California 54 votes, New York 28 votes and Texas 40 votes.

 

Ratification Process Could be Changed: In Article V the only thing mentioned that cannot be amended is the equal representation of each state in the U.S. Senate without the consent of each state. What that means is that even the amending process in Article V can be changed. As in the original Constitutional Convention where the ratification process was changed from unanimous consent to amend the Articles, to only nine states necessary to ratify the Constitution, a new Constitutional Convention could change the ratification process from three-fourths of the states to something less like twenty-six states. In addition, according to Article V, Congress can send any amendments proposed by the Convention to the State Legislatures for ratification or to conventions in those states bypassing the state legislatures entirely, which they did in order to pass the repeal of prohibition

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