The State Senate of Tennessee has laid the legislative groundwork for something that hasn't been done in the United States of America since the Constitutional Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia. With a vote of 27-3, the Tennessee Senate has voted to call a "convention of the states" in order to draft and pass an amendment to the Constitution that would require balanced budgets to be passed every year.
For those who are little fuzzy on their high school U.S. history knowledge, the Tennessean explains that the U.S. Constitution can be amended in two ways. The first would require a two-thirds majority vote in both chambers of Congress, an unlikely outcome in today's hyper-partisan political arena. The second, on the other hand, requires that two-thirds of the states (34 in total) pass a resolution calling for a Constitutional Convention.
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1 comment:
Great idea . MD has that now but they never balance the budget unless they raise taxes or steal from the State Employees Retirement Fund and never pay back the fund or put off paying back the fund for 10 years or some extend length. Hope Hogan is listening because there is a lot of retirees that are pissed off about this and these are lost votes for him on re-election.
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