“…The same is true for the constitution, which, in the words of Gee and Webber, is “already before us, the political process already in use, and the process of rebuilding is, simply put, continual. For a political constitution, there is thus no single, identifiable moment of constitution‐making and, for the political constitutionalist, it is right that this should be so” (Gee and Webber , 288, emphasis added). In this perspective, the political constitution assumes an evolutionary nature and takes up the presupposition that there should be nothing politically relevant outside constituted powers.…”