Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Strategic Ambiguity and Article VII: Why the Framers Decided Not to Decide
View through CrossRef
The U.S. Constitution ratified in 1788 contains a lot of appar-ently ambiguous language—abstract phrases like “executive pow-er,” “judicial power,” and “necessary and proper”—the meaning of which seemed to be reasonably debatable. The array of approaches to constitutional interpretation dubbed “originalist” all share the ambition of eliminating these apparent ambiguities by careful ex-humation of facts about linguistic usage and constitutional purposes in existence when the Constitution was ratified. This article argues that Article VII’s two-stage ratification process is one such original fact suggesting that apparently ambiguous language ought to be construed as deliberately ambiguous. That process gave the drafters at the Philadelphia convention (the first stage) incentives to choose deliberately ambiguous language as a strategy to mollify critics of the Constitution in the state ratifying conventions (the second stage). The drafters at Philadelphia were overwhelmingly drawn from “Federalists”—politicians who favored a strong national government. Because critics of cen-tralization (dubbed “Anti-Federalists” by their Federalist oppo-nents) were simply not present in significant numbers at the draft-ing stage, the Federalists could not use clarifying amendments to determine precisely what their opponents would tolerate in the ratifying conventions. Because Article VII did not permit the state ratifying conventions to approve clarifying amendments, the rati-fication process created a risk that, offended by specific language in an unamendable proposal, Anti-Federalist ratifiers would reject the entire proposal and doom the project of a stronger central gov-ernment that everyone desired. By proposing and approving delib-erately ambiguous language, Federalist drafters and Anti-Federalist ratifiers could sidestep their most intractable disagreements, mak-ing deliberate ambiguity a rational strategy for facilitating ratifica-tion. Moreover, this rational strategy is also normatively attractive. The critics of the Constitution deeply resented the Article VII pro-cess as an unjust device for “driving [the Constitution] down our throats.” By reducing the power of the Federalist agenda-setters to force through specific constitutional language with a reversion threat, the presumption of ambiguity respects contemporary norms of fair dealing, thereby advancing the goal of popular sovereignty with which Federalists defended the Constitution’s legitimacy.
University of Wisconsin Law School
Title: Strategic Ambiguity and Article VII: Why the Framers Decided Not to Decide
Description:
The U.
S.
Constitution ratified in 1788 contains a lot of appar-ently ambiguous language—abstract phrases like “executive pow-er,” “judicial power,” and “necessary and proper”—the meaning of which seemed to be reasonably debatable.
The array of approaches to constitutional interpretation dubbed “originalist” all share the ambition of eliminating these apparent ambiguities by careful ex-humation of facts about linguistic usage and constitutional purposes in existence when the Constitution was ratified.
This article argues that Article VII’s two-stage ratification process is one such original fact suggesting that apparently ambiguous language ought to be construed as deliberately ambiguous.
That process gave the drafters at the Philadelphia convention (the first stage) incentives to choose deliberately ambiguous language as a strategy to mollify critics of the Constitution in the state ratifying conventions (the second stage).
The drafters at Philadelphia were overwhelmingly drawn from “Federalists”—politicians who favored a strong national government.
Because critics of cen-tralization (dubbed “Anti-Federalists” by their Federalist oppo-nents) were simply not present in significant numbers at the draft-ing stage, the Federalists could not use clarifying amendments to determine precisely what their opponents would tolerate in the ratifying conventions.
Because Article VII did not permit the state ratifying conventions to approve clarifying amendments, the rati-fication process created a risk that, offended by specific language in an unamendable proposal, Anti-Federalist ratifiers would reject the entire proposal and doom the project of a stronger central gov-ernment that everyone desired.
By proposing and approving delib-erately ambiguous language, Federalist drafters and Anti-Federalist ratifiers could sidestep their most intractable disagreements, mak-ing deliberate ambiguity a rational strategy for facilitating ratifica-tion.
Moreover, this rational strategy is also normatively attractive.
The critics of the Constitution deeply resented the Article VII pro-cess as an unjust device for “driving [the Constitution] down our throats.
” By reducing the power of the Federalist agenda-setters to force through specific constitutional language with a reversion threat, the presumption of ambiguity respects contemporary norms of fair dealing, thereby advancing the goal of popular sovereignty with which Federalists defended the Constitution’s legitimacy.
Related Results
PENGARUH PEMBELAJARAN TATAP MUKA TERBATAS TERHADAP HASIL BELAJAR DITINJAU DARI MOTIVASI BELAJAR ILMU PENGETAHUAN SOSIAL
PENGARUH PEMBELAJARAN TATAP MUKA TERBATAS TERHADAP HASIL BELAJAR DITINJAU DARI MOTIVASI BELAJAR ILMU PENGETAHUAN SOSIAL
The aims of this study were (1) to determine the effect of limited face-to-face learning on social science learning outcomes for VII grade students at MTs Ar Rofiqy Bogor, (2) to d...
METHODOLOGY OF CREATING STRATEGIC AND INVESTMENT PLANS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
METHODOLOGY OF CREATING STRATEGIC AND INVESTMENT PLANS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Abstract. The purpose of the article is to substantiate the principles and present the author’s methodology for creating strategic and investment plans for the development of educa...
The Constitutional Limits of Government According to the Constitution's Framers
The Constitutional Limits of Government According to the Constitution's Framers
The U.S. Constitution, as understood by the men who wrote it – the Framers – authorized only a limited form of federal government: limited in what it is allowed to do. That power, ...
Strategic ambiguity and the Trumpian approach to China–Taiwan relations
Strategic ambiguity and the Trumpian approach to China–Taiwan relations
Abstract
The notion of strategic ambiguity has long guided the United States’ engagement in cross-strait relations, requiring that Washington is intentionally unclea...
Ambiguity in Art
Ambiguity in Art
A non-linear theory proposed different models of perception of ambiguous patterns, describing different aspects of multistable behaviour of the brain. This paper aims to review the...
LEXICAL AND SYNTACTIC AMBIGUITY IN HUMOR
LEXICAL AND SYNTACTIC AMBIGUITY IN HUMOR
Ambiguity occurs when a sentence has more than one meaning. Ambiguity can be caused by the ambiguous lexicon in which one word has more than one meaning and it can also be caused b...
Effects of HNTX-VII on Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 and Molecular Determinants of Kv4.3 Interacting with HNTX-VII
Effects of HNTX-VII on Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 and Molecular Determinants of Kv4.3 Interacting with HNTX-VII
Abstract
HNTX-VII is a novel peptide isolated and purified from the venom of the Chinese spider Ornithoctonus hainana, with a relative molecular mass of 3830.973 Da. Electr...
Strategic Management in Public Administration
Strategic Management in Public Administration
Strategic management is an approach to strategizing by public organizations or other entities that integrates strategy formulation and implementation, and typically includes strate...

