The Constitutional
Convention of 1965
In
1950 a Commission on State Government Organization was directed
by the General Assembly to work out a new constitution for Connecticut.
Its report was a long discussion of constitutional considerations
and a draft constitution. Nothing came of it but it is interesting
material. See George D. Braden and Fred V. Cahill, Jr., "A
New Constitution for Connecticut" Connecticut Bar Journal
24(1950) in two parts, pp. 121-90 and 265-323.
As
indicated by previous entries, the main target of constitutional
reform in Connecticut was the rotten borough system, which was
as bad as any other in the nation. Things were no better in the
middle of the twentieth century than they had been in the late
nineteenth. W. Duane Lockard points out that in the 1950s, 4.5
percent of the population elected 32.5 percent of the representatives.
See his "Constitutional Revision in Connecticut Notes on
a Stumbling Block and a Proposal" Connecticut Bar Journal
27(June, 1953)2:163-69.
Lockard
echoes earlier comments by John H. Riege in "Representation
in the General Assembly: Some Aspects of the Present System"
Connecticut Bar Journal 22(June, 1948). On the eve of Butterworth
v. Dempsey, the League of Independent Voters published a fifty-two-page
work, The Problem of Representation: A Review of Connecticut’s
General Assembly 1683-1963, by James Valenti and Richard Galiette
(New Haven, 1963). Valenti had instituted the redistricting case,
Valenti v. Dempsey 211 F. Supp. 911 (D. Conn., 1962), and
as recently as 1981 was still urging reason instead of politics
as a basis for drawing new electoral lines. (Connecticut
44 November, 1981 11:8-10, 24) A synopsis of the Connecticut cases
can be found in Robert B. McKay, Reapportionment: The Law and
Politics of Equal Representation (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1965). That the situation had long been a scandal of national
proportions is noted by Lane W. Lancaster in "Rotten Boroughs
and the Connecticut Legislature," National Municipal Review
13(1942).
Aside
from the legal materials, in particular the state's briefs, the
most notable tract on the side of the status quo is John Howland
Snow's Reapportionment: The Connecticut Resolves, A Reply to
the Mandates of the Courts (New Canaan: The Long House, 1964).
This work puts forth the position that equal representation by
towns is the system mandated by all the fundamental documents
of Connecticut government since 1639 and that the state at no
time surrendered authority to the U.S. judiciary to mandate such
a change. He cites long lists of judicial precedent for his position,
Snow created enough of a stir to persuade a couple of legislators
to put his Resolves before the General Assembly, but to
no effect. The opinion in Baker v. Carr had been handed
down two years earlier, and the writing on the wall was of luminous
clarity.
Constitutional
reform was finally mandated by the United States Supreme Court
in the case of Butterworth v. Dempsey 378 U.S. 564(1964).
That case is discussed rather fully in Connecticut Bar Journal
38(March, 1964) 1:92-138, which includes the opinion of the Court,
a concurring opinion, and an unpublished opinion of Justice Charles
Clark who died during the proceedings. The case forced a constitutional
convention, which in 1965 wrote a new document to replace that
of 1818. But malapportionment goes deeper than the state government,
a fact that is discussed in Lester B. Snyder and Richard N. Pearson
"Effect of Malapportionment Cases on political Subdivisions
of the State," Connecticut Bar Journal 38(March, 1965)1:1-32.
Further relevant considerations are aired in Henry S. Cohn's "The
Constitution's Impact on Connecticut Election Law," Connecticut
Bar Journal 51(September, 1977)3:214-38. This article though
emphasizing the period since Baker v. Carr(1962), which
precipitated Butterworth v. Dempsey, includes much historical
background after 1818. For an overall theoretical approach, see
William P. Aspell "Natural Law in the Connecticut Tradition"
Connecticut Bar Journal 31(June, 1957)2:105-12, in which
the author defines the concept of natural law as the idea that
law has its origin in absolute standards of right and wrong. The
author feels that natural law shows its influence in the Fundamental
Orders and subsequent basic documents.
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