Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Proposal to abolish racial discrimination") was an amendment to the Treaty of Versailles that was considered at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. Proposed by Japan, it was never intended to have any universal implications, but one was attached to it anyway, which caused its controversy. [1]
Similar amendments were proposed in 1874, 1896, and 1910 with none passing. The last attempt, in 1954, did not come to a vote. The Blaine Amendment, proposed in 1875, would have banned public funds from going to religious purposes, in order to prevent Catholics from taking advantage of such funds. [9]
List of proposed amendments to the Constitution of the United States; Proposed reforms of mass surveillance by the United States; List of proposed national monuments ...
Note: This category consists of proposals to amend the United States Constitution introduced in but not approved by Congress.Amendments approved by Congress and proposed to the states for consideration but not (yet) ratified by the required number of states to become part of the Constitution (whether expired or still pending) should be included in Category:Unratified amendments to the United ...
Since 1999, only about 20 proposed amendments have received a vote by either the full House or Senate. The last time a proposal gained the necessary two-thirds support in both the House and the Senate for submission to the states was the District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment in 1978.
Since the beginning of September, executives from nearly 200 companies in the S&P 1500 Composite index discussed tariffs on earnings calls or at investor conferences, nearly doubling the same ...
The vote of each state (to either ratify or reject a proposed amendment) carries equal weight, regardless of a state's population or length of time in the Union. Article Five is silent regarding deadlines for the ratification of proposed amendments, but most amendments proposed since 1917 have included a deadline for ratification.
The following is also added to this list: Class VI: A call for Congress to propose an amendment, with no call for a convention; Van Sickle and Boughey indicate which applications have been rescinded by their state by encasing these in parentheses, and make no note of which applications have led to amendments proposed by Congress.