Here are two such:
Throw the entire Congress out of office, and bar them from ever returning, so state legislators can replace them and get the much more lucrative graft available to Congressmen and Senators. The wording of such an amendment would be simple:
No person who, as of the effective date of this Amendment, is now serving, or has served, all or any portion of a term in the Senate or House of Representatives may be elected to, appointed to, or sworn in as a Senator or Representative.
Wording of the next Amendment would be tricky, and getting it right will require a lot of work by lawyers, politicians and scholars. My idea is to eliminate unfunded federal mandates, which I define as those required only by federal statutes and regulations as opposed to compliance with the US Constitution. That would free up (my guess, but it isnt wild-eyed) about 20-30% of all present state budgets for state legislators to happily boon-doggle.
Plus this proposed amendment should require the federal government to reimburse the states for the 5-10 years of unfunded federal mandates prior to the effective date of this amendment. Put a cap on that of about a trillion dollars.
My idea here is to also offer state legislatures a trillion dollar bribe to pass Article V Constitutional Convention resolutions. Wed save a lot more than that in a few years if such a Convention is held and actually proposes amendments for the states to ratify.
<>If we want state legislatures to pass resolutions authorizing an Article V Constitution Convention, we must give them some almighty powerful incentives.<>
Power sells itself, and their people are hurting. That is plenty of incentive.
I doubt most state legislators were aware of Article V until Mark Levin spoke to the ALEC conference last year. When I met my FL rep in 2013 he was ignorant of Article V and why the Framers’ constitution featured a senate of the states.