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An entrenched clause of a Constitution is a provision which makes certain amendments either more difficult than others or impossible. It may require some form of Supermajority , a Referendum or the consent of some other party if it is allowed at all. An entrenched clause whose intent is to ''prevent'' subsequent amendments, will, once it is adopted, and provided that it is correctly drafted, make some portion of a constitution irrevocable except through the assertion of the Right Of Revolution . They are usually justified as protecting the rights of a minority from the dangers of Majoritarianism , but they are often challenged by their opponents as being particularly undemocratic. As examples of Inadmissable Constitutional Amendments , Article Five Of The United States Constitution contains two entrenched clauses. One clause prohibited any constitutional amendment regarding the international slave trade. This clause expired in 1808. The other clause, still in effect, states that "no State, without its Consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate". This has been interpreted to require unanimous ratification of any amendment altering the composition of the United States Senate . The unratified Corwin Amendment would have amounted to another entrenched clause, protecting States' Rights to continue Slavery . There are several examples of entrenched clauses which ultimately failed in their objectives, since their protections were undermined in unintended ways.
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