California lawmakers recently passed Gov. Gavin Newsom’s resolution to amend the U.S. Constitution via a constitutional convention. The proposed 28th Amendment, if passed, would tighten gun restrictions across the country.
In a campaign video, Newsom, D-Calif., said the proposed amendment would raise the minimum age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21, mandate universal background checks, institute “reasonable” waiting periods for all gun purchases and ban civilians from buying assault rifles.
Newsom first proposed the 28th Amendment in June 2023, saying he was calling on “commonsense gun reform” that “Democrats, Republicans, Independents and gun owners overwhelmingly support.”
However, the process to get this done is overwhelmingly complicated.
The first way is that two-thirds of each house of the United States Congress must agree to the new amendment, which then must be ratified by three-fourths of the states. This is the only way the Constitution has been amended in the U.S. since the Bill of Rights was ratified.
The second way is that two-thirds of state legislatures call for a convention for the purpose of amending the Constitution. Any amendment that comes out of that convention must also be ratified by three-quarters of the states.
Eric Berger, Earl Dunlap distinguished professor of law at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, says a constitutional convention could be a dangerous route to take.
“I think one of the things that’s so dangerous about this is that nobody knows,” Berger said. “And we’re so politically polarized right now, that I don’t think we would even agree on the ground rules. Which could make it really deeply contentious and potentially even dangerous.”
It’s dangerous because the Constitution doesn’t specify the rules of holding a constitutional convention. Technically, the rules are open — and there are several questions: Do the state legislatures write the rules? Does Congress write the rules? Does the convention itself write its own rules? And how are the members of the convention selected and what topics are they limited to discuss? Or can they talk about anything?
“Because the rules of the game are so up in the air, it’s easy to imagine a situation in which, whichever side loses, thinks that the game was rigged against them,” Berger said. “And given our deep partisan divisions in this country, I do worry that it could spiral into, you know, potentially violence or at least deepen the already bad political animus.”
So, it’s unclear what a modern-day constitutional convention would look like. The only constitutional convention this country has ever seen happened back in 1787 when the original U.S. Constitution was drafted.
“[In] some sense, that was a runaway convention,” Berger said. “That convention was called to amend the Articles of Confederation and pretty early on in that meeting, the delegates agreed that the articles were hopelessly broken and needed to be replaced with something entirely different. It’s not inconceivable that the same kind of thing could happen with a new constitutional convention today.”
Even if all the delegates agreed to the convention ground rules and stuck with the single topic of gun control, the new amendment would then have be ratified by three-fourths of states for it to be added to the Constitution.
“So, the odds that this process would be used actually, to change the Constitution is pretty small,” Berger said. “It’s not impossible, but it’s pretty small.”
So, why is Gov. Newsom proposing a constitutional amendment when the odds are stacked against him?
“I think another thing to keep in mind is political actors — on both the left and the right — that are proposing constitutional conventions, even if realistically they’re not going to get a convention to change the Constitution in the way they want,” Berger said. “They are drawing attention to their political cause. So, the act of saying we’re going to call for a convention can be politically advantageous, even if they realize it’s unlikely that the convention would ever happen.”