Proposing a Balanced Budget Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Apr. 12, 2018 | H.J. Res. 2

This resolution, introduced by Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), would prohibit federal outlays from exceeding receipts, require a three-fifths vote to increase the public debt limit, and direct the President to submit a balanced budget annually to Congress. Proposing a balanced budget amendment after enacting a tax cut that will increase the debt by almost $2 trillion dollars and an omnibus appropriation bill that will further add to our nation’s debt proves that in Washington, D.C. hypocrisy knows no bounds. The truth is that the proponents of H.J. Res. 2 are not motivated by deficit concerns; rather, they are using a deficit they created to force severe budget cuts in programs that will harm the most vulnerable among us, especially seniors, children, veterans and people with disabilities, as well as slash funding for public health and safety, education and medical research. The motion to suspend the rules and pass the resolution failed to receive a two-thirds majority on April 12, 2018.

This is Bad for working people.

Vote result: Failed

YEAs: 233
NAYs: 184

Legislator State District Sort ascending Party Vote
Rep. Michael C. Burgess
TX
26 Republican Yes
Rep. Carlos Curbelo
FL
26 Republican No
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz
FL
25 Democrat No
Rep. Roger Williams
TX
25 Republican Yes
Rep. Steve Knight
CA
25 Republican Yes
Rep. Raul Ruiz
CA
25 Democrat No
Rep. Claudia Tenney
NY
24 Republican Yes
Rep. Frederica Wilson
FL
24 Democrat No
Rep. John Katko
NY
24 Republican Yes
Rep. Kenny Marchant
TX
24 Republican Yes
Rep. Salud Carbajal
CA
24 Democrat No
Rep. Will Hurd
TX
23 Republican Yes
Rep. Tom Reed
NY
23 Republican Yes
Rep. Ted Deutch
FL
22 Democrat No
Rep. Lois Frankel
FL
22 Democrat Not Voting
Rep. David Valadao
CA
22 Republican Yes
Rep. Devin Nunes
CA
22 Republican Yes
Rep. Pete Olson
TX
22 Republican Yes
Rep. Lamar Smith
TX
21 Republican Yes
Rep. Elise Stefanik
NY
21 Republican Yes