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Constitutional Convention (ConCon): To Have or Not to Have? That’s the Nov 08 Ballot Question for Hawaii Voters JoAnn Maruoka League of Women Voters of Hawaii 28 May 2008. BRAVA!. We applaud and encourage your interest in public service.
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Constitutional Convention (ConCon): To Have or Not to Have? That’s the Nov 08 Ballot Question for Hawaii Voters JoAnn Maruoka League of Women Voters of Hawaii 28 May 2008
BRAVA! We applaud and encourage your interest in public service
The League of Women Voters (LWV)strictlyNon-Partisan wholeheartedlyPolitical • National + 900 state & local Leagues • Original grassroots citizen network, consensus of women & men members • LWV-HI is statewide, comprised of county Leagues: Honolulu, Hawaii Is., Kauai, & Maui
LWV-HINeutral on ConCon • Input from Interviews, Surveys of various external leaders (pros & cons split) • Members have strong but differing views, so no LWV-HI consensus • Rather than position advocacy, our focus is educating & informing electorate: forums, debates on wide media • Constitution, background, pros/cons on our website www.lwv-hawaii.com Add Your Voice(website or email)
So… ConCon So What? Why a ballot question? What’s all the buzz? Why should I care?
Am. federal system rests on 2 constitutional pillars: the 50 state constitutions & the U.S. Constitution U.S. - supreme law of the United States of America State - governing document of that U.S. state Constitutions are fundamental law Constitutions and Law
Constitutional Law isbased on a formal document that defines broad powers • Federal originates from US Constitution • State originates from individual state constitution • Statutes & Ordinances are legislation • passed at the federal, state, or local level Constitutional v. Statutory Law
State Constitutions Limit the powers of the state government Contain much more detail (id specific limitations on otherwise virtually unlimited gov’t power) Contain long articles on taxation and finance, 2 of the most important functions of any government Allow for more citizen involvement in their drafting & amendments; they are easier to amend
Hawaii Constitution: 18 Articles I Bill of Rights II Suffrage & Elections III The Legislature IV Reapportionment V The Executive VI The Judiciary VII Taxation & Finance VIII Local Government IX Public Health & Welfare X Education XI Conservation, Control & Development of Resources XII Hawaiian Affairs XIII Organization; Collective Bargaining XIV Code of Ethics XV State Boundaries, Capital, State Flag, Language & Motto XVI General & Miscellaneous Provisions XVII Revision & Amendment XVIII Schedule
Constitutional Change In democracies, constitutional change occurs 2 ways, by altering: Meaning of the document thru interpretation, or Text of the document thru amendment or revision U.S. Constitution: change thru interpretation dominates State constitutions: formal change (amendments, revision) far more frequent than at national level
State Constitutional Change All state constitutions permit amendments to be formally proposed by state legislatures – this is most common method of constitutional change 25 state constitutions expressly provide amendment methods to be proposed without legis participation, by: popular petition (constitutional initiative); state constitutional commission; or constitutional convention Hawaii’s is 1 of 14 state constitutions providing for automatic periodic placement on ballot of whether ConCon should be held (HI every 10 yr, others 16-20 yr)
What is a ConCon? A convention of delegates elected to examine, discuss & propose to voters amendments to the state Constitution Constitutional convention (ConCon) is the oldest & most traditional method for extensive revision
Changing Hawaii’s Constitution Amendments may be proposed to voters by legislature or by a ConCon • To pass an amendment or convene a ConCon = “majority of ballots cast,” which means ‘yes’ votes at least 50% of all ballots cast (including ‘no’ votes, blank & spoiled ballots) • Article XVII: ConCon question to the people every 10 years • Legis may submit to voters at any gen. or special election • Because last election when question submitted to voters was 1998, it will be on the ballot in Nov 2008
Hawaii’s Constitutional Changes Legislature-proposed constitutional amendments: • 68 since Statehood, 49 of which were adopted Hawaii has had 3 ConCons (1950, 1968, & 1978); of ConCon-proposed constitutional amendments, voters: • ratified Constitution ppsd by 1950 ConCon • adopted 22 of 23 amendments ppsd by 1968 ConCon • adopted all 33 amendments ppsd by 1978 ConCon
Hawaii Constitution & ConCons 1950: Produced State Constitution to demonstrate to Congress & the nation that citizens of Territory of Hawaii ready to be full members of the union of states (63 delegates) 1968: Primarily needed to address apportionment problem of Legis because of “1 person - 1 vote" ruling by U.S. Supreme Court; add’l outcomes (82 delegates, McKinley High School) 1978: No compelling legal reasons, “good gov’t” advocates felt many issues needed review, 74% passage; many outcomes (102 delegates, Old Federal Bldg) 1986, 1998voters rejected a convention
To get estimated costs of convening a ConConin case of affirmative vote: Legislature passed resolution authorizing Legis Ref Bureau (LRB) to conduct a study; results by Sep 1Governor announced separate 11-member ConCon Cost Task Force chaired by Lt Gov to consider a range of factors in determining cost; it will hold a series of public meetings & release findings by Aug 1LWV-HI view: if ConCon passes, imperative that ConCon be adequately funded, given enough time to do thorough review, be open to ensure full public access & participation Costof ConCon
Review our Constitution, see Pros & Cons, Info Forums, DebatesConsider what you think is important:Fatal flaws in current? Something needed but missing?Constitution responsive to changing world? Need to modernize it? Need to re-examine fundamental structure of state, local govts? Need to relook balance of power among exec, legis, judic? Other issues?State constitutional politics dominated by 3 crucial issues: distribution of power among groups & regions within state; scope ofstate & localgovernmental authority; relation of state to economic activity(G.A. Tarr) On the Question of a ConCon
Must be the People’s ConventionMany Actions, Also OpportunitiesLegislature responsible, subject to ground rules Election of DelegatesPreparing Delegates for the TasksConvening ConConResults voted on by the people If ConCon Question Passes
If ConCon Question Passes Work of next legislature will be very important • Legis decides # delegates, areas from which elected • Legis provides convention funding (salaries, facilities, equipment) Vital that public get involved, express their views For ConCon itself, citizen participation, by running for delegates or being active observers, is critical to ensure it truly be the People’s Convention
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