Featured

Florida Legislature to Consider Calling for National Constitutional Convention

Share

Tallahassee, Fl- The Florida House of Representatives will be considering whether to call for a constitutional convention to propose new amendments to the US Constitution. 

The event comes after Representative Tyler Sirois filed a bill, concurrent resolution 703, which would add Florida to the growing list of states calling for a constitutional convention. 

Under Article V of the US Constitution, new amendments can be proposed to the US via constitutional convention if two-thirds of the States call for one. 

Currently, Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and Wyoming have all called for a convention.

The bid for a constitutional convention is limited to calling for an amendment to compel the National government to carry a balanced budget. 

According to the Urban Institute, nearly all US states have balanced budget requirements (BBRs). BBRs limit governments’ capacity to increase debt through deficit spending by imposing statutory restrictions on sending power. 

The US government is currently $34 trillion dollars in debt. If Sirois’ resolution passes and enough states support the convention initiative, ultimately resulting in an amendment, US debt would have to be reduced. 

Earlier this year, the US’s credit rating was downgraded by the international credit rating agency Fitch Ratings. 

On April 21, 2010, the Legislature of the State of Florida passed Senate Concurrent Resolution 10, which similarly called for a constitutional convention to balance the federal budget. 

Such resolution, however, was written in a manner that would enable the convention to consider amendment proposals separate from those regarding a balanced federal budget.

Some lawmakers fear the potential for a ‘runaway convention’ to result in a proliferation of amendments not originally intended by convention proponents. 

Sirois’ current resolution lists Florida’s support for a convention insofar as such convention is constrained to only considering amendments requiring a balanced national budget. 

Mateo Guillamont

Mateo is a Miami-based political reporter covering national and local politics

Recent Posts

Even if 100% of FL Dems Vote Tomorrow, Just 45% of Remaining FL GOP Must Vote to Keep Turnout Lead

Florida Republicans hold such a commanding voter registration and turnout lead over their Democrat counterparts…

3 hours ago

Salazar Wants Speaker Johnson to Fund Physician Training

Florida Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar (R) is calling on House Speaker Mike Johnson (R) to…

4 hours ago

Mast, Waltz Want Pentagon to Help Service Members Vote

Florida Reps. Brian Mast (R) and Mike Waltz (R) are calling out the Pentagon for…

4 hours ago

Cruz Describes Harris as 'Extreme' and 'Left of Bernie Sanders'

Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) appeared on Newsmax to discuss the policy record of former Senator…

5 hours ago

Scott, Cruz Pen Op-Ed Bashing Biden-Harris Inflation

Senators Rick Scott (R-FL) and Ted Cruz have released their response to the Bureau of…

5 hours ago

JUICE🍊—11.4.2024—Trump/ Harris Race Razor Thin—More Political Drama in Miami-Dade—Much More...

Election Night Photo finish Former President Donald Trump is leading Vice President Kamala Harris in the latest polls as…

6 hours ago