[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 132 (Tuesday, September 16, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S5618]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBSERVING THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, tomorrow we will mark Constitution Day--a
day set aside to reflect on our Nation's charter and how it has shaped
what it means to be American. On September 17, 1787, George Washington,
James Madison, and their fellow Framers made the momentous decision to
sign the Constitution and send it along to the American people for
ratification marking a new beginning in our Nation's profound
experiment in democracy.
As important as the original charter continues to be, the Founders
did not design it to be immutable. One of its most notable features is
article 5, which established the process for improvement in the form of
constitutional amendments. This key provision rooted in both
intellectual humility and constitutional faith--ensured that our
Nation's constitutional journey would not conclude in Philadelphia in
1787. Instead, it would continue to unfold in the decades and centuries
that followed, tasking each generation of Americans with improving the
charter in order to build ``a more perfect Union.''
Since the ratification of the Bill of Rights in 1791, our
Constitution has been amended 17 times. These changes have helped to
make the Constitution the revered document it is today. As I have noted
on previous Constitution Days, Americans must celebrate not just the
original Constitution of Washington, Madison, and the founding
generation, but the whole Constitution, including its 27 amendments.
This is all the more important as we approach a key set of
anniversaries--the 150th anniversaries of the 13th, 14th, and 15th
Amendments, which many scholars have rightly described as our nation's
``Second Founding.''
Ratified by President Lincoln and his generation after the Civil War,
these Second Founding amendments transformed our original charter--
ending slavery, banning racial discrimination in voting, and elevating
liberty and equality to a central place in our constitutional order.
Perhaps most importantly, these amendments gave Congress the authority
it needed to protect the civil rights of all Americans--authority that
we have used to pass landmark civil rights laws such as the Voting
Rights Act of 1965.
Before our Nation marked the original Constitution's bicentennial in
1987, Congress established a commission led by Chief Justice Burger to
organize a national celebration. Americans from across the political
spectrum came together in a spirit of unity and pride to honor the
founding generation's profound achievements. With the 150th anniversary
of the second founding, President Lincoln and his generation deserve
the same.
It is deeply saddening to me that the anniversary of the 13th, 14th,
and 15th Amendments coincides not with such a celebration, however, but
with what can be called nothing short of an attack on the principles of
equality and liberty they protect. The Supreme Court's decision in
Shelby County v. Holder and the wave of recent State laws undermining
the right to vote demonstrate a dangerous erosion of these monumental
Amendments that provide us the tools we need to build a fairer, freer,
and more equal society.
Tomorrow, as we celebrate the signing of our Constitution 227 years
ago, I hope we also reflect on the unfinished work ahead that is
necessary to live up to the core principles enshrined in our Nation's
charter--including those of the second founding. The racial tensions
exposed by the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, MO are not
new, but they should serve as a clear reminder that our work is not
done. I am heartened by the national dialogue that has been sparked by
that young man's tragic death, and it is my sincere hope that we can
harness that energy, directing it not toward greater distrust and
divide but toward meeting the challenge to build ``a more perfect
Union'' left to us by our Founders.
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