"No society can make a perpetual constitution, or even a
perpetual law. The earth belongs to the living
generation."--Thomas Jefferson
"A constitution intended to endure for years to come [is]
consequently to be adapted to the various crises of human
affairs."--John Marshall
"This book will ask readers to set aside their own
political loyalties, to look past the current 'values'
debates and hot-button issues, to consider this very real
possibility: that the failure of the nation to update the
Constitution and the structure of government it originally
bequeathed to us is at the root of our current political
dysfunction."--Larry Sabato
The political book of the year, from the acclaimed founder
and director of the Center for Politics at the University
of Virginia.
Larry Sabato has one of the most visionary and fertile
political minds in America. Like so many, he is
increasingly alarmed at the growing dysfunction and
unfairness of our political system. To solve this, to
restore the equity for ordinary citizens that is at the
core of our democratic society, we must take a radical
step--to revise the Constitution, the document that
guides our political process, for until some of its
outmoded provisions are reformed, we will only have more
of the same.
The original framers fully expected the Constitution to
be regularly revised by succeeding generations to reflect
the country's changing needs; yet, apart from the ten
amendments in the Bill of Rights, it has only been
amended 17 times in 220 years, and most of those
amendments had minor ramifications. Today, partisan
gridlock dominates Washington; 17 percent of voters elect
a majority of senators; the presidency has assumed
unprecedented and unintended powers; while politicians
spend as much time campaigning for office as they do
governing; and average Americans feel more and more
disconnected from the political process so that half or
more don't vote in many elections--all of which would
have horrified Jefferson and Madison.
A More Perfect Constitution presents twenty three
creative and dynamic proposals to reinvigorate American
governance at a time when such change is urgently needed.
Combining idealism and pragmatism, and with full respect
for the original document, Sabato's thought-provoking
ideas range from the length of the president's term in
office and the number and terms of Supreme Court justices
to the structure of Congress, the vagaries of the
antiquated Electoral College, and a compelling call for
universal national service--all laced through with the
history behind each issue and their potential impact on
the lives of ordinary people.
Aware that such changes won't happen easily, Sabato urges
us nonetheless to engage in the debate and discussion
they will surely engender. As we head towards a
presidential election year, no book is more relevant or
significant than his.