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 Party Sort ascending Vote
Rep. Charlie Dent
PA
15 Republican Yes
Rep. Steve King
IA
4 Republican Yes
Rep. Alex Mooney
WV
2 Republican Yes
Rep. Lee Zeldin
NY
1 Republican Yes
Rep. Frank D. Lucas
OK
3 Republican Yes
Sen. Kevin Cramer
ND
Republican Yes
Rep. Jeffrey Denham
CA
10 Republican Yes
Rep. Vicky Hartzler
MO
4 Republican Yes
Rep. Jim Renacci
OH
16 Republican Yes
Rep. John Moolenaar
MI
2 Republican Yes
Rep. Jack Bergman
MI
1 Republican Yes
Rep. David Young
IA
3 Republican Yes
Rep. Claudia Tenney
NY
24 Republican Yes
Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen
NJ
11 Republican Yes
Rep. Dave Joyce
OH
14 Republican Yes
Rep. Ken Calvert
CA
41 Republican Yes
Rep. Andy Harris
MD
1 Republican Yes
Rep. Dave Reichert 8 Republican Yes
Rep. Paul Mitchell
MI
10 Republican Yes
Rep. Don Young
AK
At Large Republican Yes