| The Administration strongly opposes a constitutional amendment requiring a 
two-thirds supermajority vote to raise revenues. 
The Nation's 200 year-old constitutional system, with its strong emphasis on 
majority rule, should not be altered or amended for symbolic or political 
purposes.  James Madison, in The Federalist Papers (No. 58) argued 
against requiring supermajorities for legislative business, stating "the 
fundamental principle of free government would be reversed.  It would be no 
longer the majority that would rule:  the power would be transferred to the 
minority."
 
The language of H.J.Res. 62, as reported, is ambiguous -- but is problematic no 
matter how it is interpreted.  If the proposed amendment applies to all 
"chang[es in] the internal revenue laws," it would take a two-thirds majority 
to cut taxes as well as increase taxes.   Alternatively, if the 
amendment is read to apply only to "increase[s]... by more than a de minimis 
amount," we would have the absurd result that special interest tax loopholes 
could be enacted by a simple majority,  but a two-thirds super-majority 
would be required to close loopholes. 
 
Another harmful effect of H.J.Res. 62 would be permitting a small minority of 
legislators in either House to block revenue-raising measures needed to prepare 
for potential military conflicts or to respond to other national emergencies. 
 
Enforcement of the proposed amendment would also raise serious concerns.  If 
the proposed amendment is read to authorize judicial enforcement, courts could 
be drawn into fundamental policy and political disputes better resolved by the 
elected branches of government (e.g., determining whether a tax increase is "de 
minimis" or in distinguishing between a fee and a tax).  Alternatively, if 
judicial enforcement is unavailable, those who would seek to enforce the 
amendment would be left without a remedy, and the public's confidence in the 
Constitution would be diminished.
 
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