Richard Labunski is an American journalism professor at the University of Kentucky and newspaper columnist[4] who is an outspoken advocate for reforming the United States Constitution in his book The Second Constitutional Convention.[5] He has been a critic of voter apathy, low voter turnout, and excessive campaign spending. Labunski's book [3] James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights (2006) argued that Madison was initially lukewarm to the idea of a Bill of Rights to the Constitution, but later came to energetically support the ten amendments and worked hard for their inclusion.[6] He has called for a Second Constitutional Convention of the United States, and argued that reform will not happen through the current system because Congress would be reluctant to "limit its own powers."[7]
Richard Labunski | |
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Born | |
Nationality | American |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley (BA) University of California, Santa Barbara (MA, PhD) Seattle Law School (JD) |
Known for | The Second Constitutional Convention (2000)[1][2] James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights (2006)[3] |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Journalism, Law, Political Science |
Institutions | University of Kentucky |
Labunski received a B.A. in political science from the University of California, Berkeley, an M.A. and Ph.D. in political science from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a J.D. degree from Seattle University.[8] He worked as a radio and television reporter, producer, and editor at WTOP Radio (Washington, D.C.); KCBS Radio (San Francisco); KGUN-TV (Tucson); and KTVN-TV (Reno).[9] He taught at the University of Washington for 11 years, as well as at Penn State University.[9] He has been at the University of Kentucky since 1995, as a professor in the School of Journalism and Telecommunications.[9]
In The Second Constitutional Convention (2000), Labunski proposed communication via the Internet as a way for Americans to organize a federal constitutional convention[8] with a website serving as a "national meeting spot, a sort of cyberspace town meeting where people can get information".
Which brings me to the best book of them all — and the only one of the four worth remembering — and that is Labunski's unheralded "James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights" (Oxford 2006). The University of Kentucky journalism professor offers in mind-numbing detail Madison's efforts first to prevent a bill of rights from being incorporated into the text of the Constitution, and then his real politic realization that the Constitution itself only would be accepted by his fellow Founders if in the end it did include a bill of particularized rights and freedoms. To absorb the Madison book is to understand that the Constitution is neither the Ark of the Covenant (as Thomas Jefferson once famously said) nor a mere legal guidepost along the American way that ought to be dispensed with in difficult times.
It is instead, as Labunski laboriously points out, a document conceived and drafted by rich white men during the political moment of their lives; a document brilliant mostly for its ambiguities and its ability (thanks to generations of judges as polished and as responsible for our rule of law as any of Madison's gang) to foresee the potential, indeed, the destiny, of a changed and changing world.
"We need some constitutional amendments rather urgently that could not be enacted any other way," said Richard Labunski, a University of Kentucky scholar and the author of "The Second Constitutional Convention: How the American People Can Take Back Their Government." "We need to give challengers a better chance of unseating incumbents, and it simply will not happen that Congress would vote to limit its own powers," he argued.