This article first appeared on the Mountain States Policy Center website.
In less than five years, Montana voters will decide whether to have a convention to propose either an updated state constitution or amendments to the existing one.
This will be a momentous decision, so it is not too early to begin public discussion now. Moreover, Montanans are entitled to hear all sides of the issue: All too often, opinion makers have celebrated the existing state constitution without admitting that it has flaws.
This is the first in a series of articles that will discuss those flaws—while still acknowledging the document’s strengths.
By contrast, the U.S. Constitution has been amended only 17 times since the adoption of the Bill of Rights in 1791. The Illinois constitution—two years older than Montana’s charter—has been amended 15 times.
Other Problems
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The constitution was advertised as “populist,” but in some ways, it actually shifted power away from the people and toward the bureaucracy and the courts. Eminently reasonable decisions made through the democratic process often are blocked by courts and bureaucrats using poorly drafted sections of the state constitution. The courts even used the state constitution to prevent the legislature from moving the voter registration deadline back by a single day!
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The courts have applied some parts of the document very differently from how they were presented to the voters. In other states, a constitutional amendment is a viable remedy for this. But in Montana, the state supreme court has made corrective amendments almost impossible.
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Much of the document is well written, but important parts are ambiguous, otherwise vague, or even contradictory. I’ll discuss examples in subsequent articles in this series.
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At least one provision violates the U.S. Constitution (the “non-sectarian” clause) and was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Ideas considered “enlightened and progressive” in 1972—and therefore inserted in the constitution—have been discredited by later practical experience.
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Montanans have faced repeated controversies over property taxation and other forms of taxation, partly because the constitution lacks financial safeguards that appear in other state charters.
Doubtful Ratification
Justifiably or not, the 1972 constitution’s ratification is under a cloud. Montanans are entitled to a constitution that everyone can be proud of, and that was ratified without controversy.
