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Bill

SB 262

An Act amending Title 42 (Judiciary and Judicial Procedure) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in actions, proceedings and other matters generally, providing for extreme risk protection orders.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Carolyn Comitta and 15 co-sponsors

SB 262 rescinds North Carolina’s pre‑Dec 1, 2024 applications for an Article V constitutional convention, removing NC as a supporter of those calls.

Referred to Judiciary
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 262

Summary — SB 262: Rescind Old Calls / Constitutional Convention

Status (as provided): Introduced Feb 3, 2025; Passed 1st Reading.

Purpose
- SB 262 directs North Carolina’s General Assembly to withdraw (rescind) every existing application the Assembly previously sent to the U.S. Congress requesting that Congress call a convention under Article V of the U.S. Constitution to propose amendments. The rescission covers all such applications ratified prior to December 1, 2024, whether those applications sought a limited (subject‑specific) convention or a general convention.

Key provisions
- Rescission directive: The General Assembly formally rescinds “all extant applications” it has ratified before Dec. 1, 2024, that requested an Article V convention to propose one or more constitutional amendments.
- Scope: The bill explicitly applies to both (a) “limited” applications (calls on a particular subject or purposes) and (b) “general” applications (calls for an unrestricted convention proposing any number of amendments).
- Effective date: The bill states it becomes effective when it becomes law.

Who or what would be affected
- Primary: North Carolina’s official position on Article V convention calls — the State will no longer count as a supporter of any of the rescinded applications.
- Secondary: National Article V convention movements and the tally of state applications that Congress or organized efforts use to determine whether the 34‑state threshold for calling a convention has been reached. Rescissions by states reduce the pool of active applications.
- Minimal direct effect on individuals or state agencies; the action is procedural and political.

Procedural / timeline aspects
- The bill rescinds only applications ratified prior to Dec. 1, 2024; it does not address applications made afterward.
- Effect is immediate upon enactment (becomes law).
- Whether Congress (or courts) treats state rescissions as effective is an unsettled legal question—Congress historically has discretion in interpreting the Article V process and may or may not accept rescinded applications as withdrawn.

Additional notes / potential legal and practical implications
- Legal uncertainty: There is no definitive Supreme Court precedent resolving whether a state may rescind a previously forwarded Article V application and whether Congress must treat rescissions as nullifying prior submissions. Implementation may therefore depend on congressional practice or future litigation.
- Policy signal: Enactment would clearly state North Carolina’s policy preference against supporting (pre‑Dec. 1, 2024) Article V convention calls.
- Fiscal impact: The bill is procedural and likely carries no material fiscal impact on the State.

For readers: SB 262 is a legislative assertion of state posture toward the interstate Article V convention mechanism; its practical effect on whether a convention is actually called depends on how Congress and the courts treat state rescissions.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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