Texas 2017 85th Regular

Texas House Bill HCR137 Introduced / Bill

Filed 05/03/2017

                    85R26850 KSM-D
 By: Klick H.C.R. No. 137


 CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, May 5, 2017, marks the 25th anniversary of the
 unconventional ratification of the 27th Amendment to the United
 States Constitution; and
 WHEREAS, One of the original 12 amendments submitted,
 pursuant to Article V, to the state legislatures for ratification
 by the First U.S. Congress, in 1789, the 27th Amendment was crafted
 by James Madison of Virginia while he served as a member of the U.S.
 House of Representatives; by the end of 1791, 10 of the 12
 amendments, known collectively as the Bill of Rights, had been
 approved by the requisite three-fourths of the states; the other
 two amendments, one of which pertained to congressional
 compensation, fell by the wayside; and
 WHEREAS, The congressional compensation measure stipulated
 that "No law, varying the compensation for the services of the
 Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election
 of Representatives shall have intervened"; the amendment would thus
 prevent federal lawmakers from immediately benefiting from any pay
 raise they might give themselves, as every representative--and a
 third of the senators--would have to win reelection before they
 could realize a gain; and
 WHEREAS, In 1982, a student at The University of Texas at
 Austin, Gregory Watson, learned about this unratified
 still-pending amendment and concluded that it was eminently
 relevant, Congress having granted itself a substantial pay raise in
 1978 and a special tax break in 1981; he determined that the
 amendment remained viable, and he committed himself to the
 laborious mission of securing its approval; the amendment gradually
 garnered wide public support, and with his dedicated efforts, it
 worked its way through a succession of state legislatures for a
 decade; on May 5, 1992, Alabama became the 38th state to ratify the
 centuries-old measure, thus securing its incorporation as the 27th
 Amendment to the U.S. Constitution some 202 years after it was
 proposed by a Congress that was conducting its business in New York
 City; and
 WHEREAS, A quarter century after its ratification, the 27th
 Amendment remains the most recent amendment to our nation's
 constitution, and it is indeed fitting that its unusual history and
 its significance be recognized; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 85th Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby commemorate the 25th anniversary of the ratification of the
 27th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.