List of proposed amendments to the United States Constitution

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This is an incomplete list of proposed amendments to the United States Constitution, in reverse chronological order.

Many amendments are proposed every year. Most never get out of Congressional committees. Few of the amendments below passed even the first constitutional hurdle: approval by two-thirds majorities in both Houses of Congress. For a more information on amendments that have been approved by Congress, but not by the state legislatures, see Unsuccessful attempts to amend the U.S. Constitution.

The following are largely amendments that have gained national attention and / or debate, presumably by concerning an issue of contemporary political relevance to Americans in general.

Contents

  • Several constitutional amendments simultaneously proposed by Representative Jesse Jackson Jr. on March 2, 2005, including, but not limited to, amendments concerning:
  1. The right of citizens of the United States to health care of equal high quality.
  2. The right of all citizens of the United States to a public education of equal high quality.
  3. The right to vote.
  4. The right to a clean, safe, and sustainable environment.
  5. The right to decent, safe, sanitary, and affordable housing.
  6. Equality of rights and reproductive rights. This amendment is essentially a modified version of the Equal Rights Amendment which would bolster Roe v. Wade.
  7. The right to full employment and balanced growth.
  8. Taxing the people of the United States progressively.

  • 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; although it failed to pass, many states adopted such provisions.
  • Corwin Amendment, approved by Congress in 1861, which would have forbidden any constitutional amendment that would interfere with slavery.
  • The Crittenden Compromise, a joint resolution that included six constitutional amendments that would protect slavery.
  • Titles of Nobility Amendment, approved by Congress in 1810, would have revoked the citizenship of anyone accepting a foreign title of nobility.

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United States Constitution Complete text at Wikisource

Original text: Preamble ∙ Article 1 ∙ Article 2 ∙ Article 3 ∙ Article 4 ∙ Article 5 ∙ Article 6 ∙ Article 7

Amendments: 1 ∙ 2 ∙ 3 ∙ 4 ∙ 5 ∙ 6 ∙ 7 ∙ 8 ∙ 9 ∙ 10 ∙ 11 ∙ 12 ∙ 13 ∙ 14 ∙ 15 ∙ 16 ∙ 17 ∙ 18 ∙ 19 ∙ 20 ∙ 21 ∙ 22 ∙ 23 ∙ 24 ∙ 25 ∙ 26 ∙ 27
 Formation  History of the Constitution • Articles of Confederation • Annapolis Convention • Philadelphia Convention • New Jersey Plan • Virginia Plan • Connecticut Compromise • Signatories
 Adoption  Massachusetts Compromise • Federalist Papers
 Amendments  Bill of Rights • Ratified • Proposed • Unsuccessful • Conventions to propose • State ratifying conventions
 Clauses  Case or controversy • Citizenship • Commerce • Commerce (Dormant) • Contract • Copyright • Due Process • Equal Protection • Establishment • Free Exercise • Full Faith and Credit • Impeachment • Natural–born citizen • Necessary and Proper • No Religious Test • Presentment • Privileges and Immunities (Art. IV) • Privileges or Immunities (14th Amend.) • Speech or Debate • Supremacy • Suspension • Takings Clause • Taxing and Spending • Territorial • War Powers
 Interpretation  Congressional power of enforcement • Double jeopardy • Enumerated powers • Incorporation of the Bill of Rights • Nondelegation • Preemption • Separation of church and state • Separation of powers • Constitutional theory • Executive privilege
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