logo
Call for congressional term limits clears final hurdle, pregnancy centers debated

Call for congressional term limits clears final hurdle, pregnancy centers debated

Yahoo18-03-2025
Rep. Dave Hall, R-Norman, was the House sponsor for Senate Joint Resolution 21 — an application for a convention to propose constitutional amendments. He is shown on the House floor in January 2025. (Indiana House Republicans)
Indiana on Monday became the 11th state to issue an identical call for a convention to amend congressional term limits into the United States Constitution — after five years of attempts.
Meanwhile, a separate resolution supporting pregnancy centers drew emotional testimony. The House also concurred with Senate changes to a gun records measure as an inter-chamber debate over carbon dioxide funds continues.
'For too long, career politicians in D.C. have remained in office for decades, prioritizing re-election over results,' Rep. Dave Hall, R-Norman, told colleagues from the House floor.
He was the House sponsor for Senate Joint Resolution 21, which representatives approved on a 66-30 vote. About a dozen members of each party defected during the vote, with some Republicans opposing the joint resolution and some Democrats voting in support. The measure doesn't need the governor's signature.
Indiana call to amend congressional term limits into Constitution gains ground
The joint resolution is an application for a convention to propose amendments under Article V of the Constitution. It uses language from U.S. Term Limits, an organization that in 2016 launched a national campaign for identically worded applications focused exclusively on congressional term limits.
Ten other states have already signed on, according to USTL: Florida, Alabama, Missouri, West Virginia, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Louisiana, North Carolina and South Dakota. Applications from 34 states are needed to trigger a convention, while 38 must ratify the changes resulting from a convention.
The USTL application specifies that the convention should be a 'limited' one, just for amendments restricting the number of times U.S. House and Senate members can be elected to their posts. It describes how it should be aggregated only with same-subject applications and separately, sent to other state legislatures as an 'invitation to join in this call.'
'As more states pass resolutions, Congress will be pressured to take action before the convention is convened,' Hall said. 'The reality is, an Article V convention is highly unlikely, not because term limits lack support, but because Congress will never allow the process to be taken out of its hands.'
That hasn't halted fears of a 'runaway convention' among lawmakers — particularly in the Senate — and other stakeholders. Legal scholars differ on whether a convention can be limited to a single topic, or if such a meeting could risk existing freedoms codified in the Constitution.
House lawmakers aired other complaints Monday.
Rep. Chris Judy, R-Fort Wayne, opposed the joint resolution because 'the real issue is the 17th Amendment,' which provided for the direct election of U.S. senators.
Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, argued voters already impose term limits via elections. He also implied it's hypocritical to advance the resolution but not limit state-level tenure.
'I will not have to explain to my constituents why I'm not voting for term limits on myself when I'm voting on it for the congressional members. The rest of you can enjoy yourselves making that explanation,' DeLaney said.
In the Senate, a legislative resolution recognizing pregnancy care centers drew heated discussion, with Republicans maintaining that such facilities fill critical care gaps for women 'during the most precious time in their lives.'
Democrats, however, decried the controversial history surrounding the anti-abortion practices of some centers and questioned how the 'unregulated entities' spend millions of taxpayer dollars received through the state budget.
Senate Concurrent Resolution 24 author Sen. Jeff Raatz, R-Richmond, maintained that pregnancy care centers are staffed by volunteers that 'help guide women in the direction … they need to go.' The measure advanced from the chamber 39-9 along party lines.
'We know we struggle with access to care. … We can't produce enough OB-GYNs quick enough to fill the openings we have. So if we just let it go like this, people (won't) have access to someone in the community that can give them practical advice about clothing and other things that they might need to be able to bring this baby to life,' Raatz said Monday. 'We have hospitals in rural Indiana with no OGBYNs. Why not have an innocent individual stand alongside these women and help make decisions and connect them with resources?'
The concurrent resolution asserts that 'the Indiana General Assembly strongly supports pregnancy care centers in their unique, positive contributions to the individual lives of women, men, and babies — both born and unborn.'
These non-medical entities go by many names, including: pregnancy care centers, crisis pregnancy centers and pregnancy resource centers.
Raatz's measure claims there are more than 2,500 such centers nationwide, offering resources such as pregnancy tests, peer counseling, parenting classes, prenatal information, ultrasounds and referrals to other services. However, some centers have been criticized for misrepresenting themselves as medical facilities, despite offering little-to-no health services.
Minority Leader Sen. Shelli Yoder, D-Bloomington, said the concurrent resolution goes further than thanking center volunteers.
The proposal includes an appeal to federal and state agencies to support the centers, which largely run on donations and volunteers, 'in a manner that does not compromise the mission or religious integrity of these organizations.' It specifically mentions funding for medical equipment, such as ultrasound machines.
Yoder pointed to Real Alternatives, a state-funded anti-abortion organization, that currently gets $4 million per fiscal year from the Indiana budget, and last year used taxpayer dollars to hold a tailgate with liquor, beer and 'ladies from Twin Peaks' restaurant.
And she noted the entities are not regulated, so they're not subject to health care regulations.
'Hoosier moms and babies deserve better,' Yoder said Monday.
Legislation expunging red flag law records heads to Gov. Mike Braun's desk after the House concurred with Senate changes.
Indiana's red flag law allows police to temporarily remove firearms from people considered 'dangerous.' Under House Bill 1137, records would be sealed and expunged if a court later decides someone isn't dangerous, although law enforcement would maintain access.
But disagreement over where fees from carbon dioxide sequestration projects should go didn't get resolved on Monday — and won't until lawmakers strike a compromise in a separate bill.
Senate Bill 457 would exempt pipeline companies from needing to get certificates of authority in certain cases, create a permit for exploratory wells and well conversions; add inspection provisions; charge new fines for legal violations; and tweak other fee amounts. Originally, fines and fees would've gone to dedicated funds to defray state spending on project administration and monitoring.
But an amendment from Sen. Ryan Mishler, R-Mishawaka, who leads the powerful Senate Appropriation Committee, would direct the money to the state's General Fund instead. Edits undoing the changes were skipped in committee last week, while an amendment with a 50-50 compromise went uncalled on the floor Monday.
'All my time here, funds were created by the (governor's) administration, so the Senate took the funds out. Now … the second floor says, 'Oh, no, it belongs in statute,'' Rep. Ed Soliday told the Capital Chronicle, referring to the location of Braun's office.
'But the choice in the bill is: who's going to pay? Is it going to be the taxpayer or is it going to be the petitioner? And I think it should be the petitioner,' Soliday, the bill's House sponsor, continued. 'Why should you and I pay for it?'
He said the House would pass the Senate's version, 'and then we'll sort this funds thing out in some other trailer (bill).' He hoped to avoid a conference committee 'because that's when mischief gets done.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Republicans and Democrats call for more information on Epstein case
Republicans and Democrats call for more information on Epstein case

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Republicans and Democrats call for more information on Epstein case

Trump and many of his allies vowed to release a trove of files in the case, including a so-called 'client list' that many involved in the case insist never existed. But the release of some documents earlier this year offered no new revelations. And the Justice Department said this month that it had closed the case and would not release more documents, concluding that there was no client list. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up One of Epstein's former lawyers, Alan Dershowitz, said in an interview on 'Fox News Sunday' that the grand jury testimony was unlikely to contain the information that has most interested Trump's supporters. Advertisement Trump has encouraged his base to move on. But the backlash seemed to be on his mind Sunday morning, when he accused 'Radical Left Democrats' of exposing the 'Jeffrey Epstein Hoax.' Burchett also took up Trump's argument Sunday, saying that Democrats had the chance to release the materials when former president Joe Biden was in office. Advertisement At the same time, Burchett is one of 10 Republicans who have signed on to an effort to force a vote on whether the administration should release the files. The procedural maneuver would require a majority of House members, and Burchett said he was not sure if it would succeed. 'I have no earthly idea,' he said on CNN. 'You know this town buries secrets.' Democrats in Congress have seized on the divide that has opened up between Trump and his supporters, trying to force votes on measures that call for the release of Epstein-related files and pressing for hearings. They have rejected Trump's efforts to redirect the blame to them. 'The president blaming Democrats for this disaster, Jake, is like that CEO that got caught on camera blaming Coldplay,' said Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, to CNN's Jake Tapper, referring to a viral video that showed the married CEO of a tech company with his arms around a woman who is not his wife. Klobuchar, instead blamed the public's clamoring for the files on right-wing politicians, including Trump, who she said had sown distrust in federal prosecutors over the case. 'People have a reason that they want to know what's in there,' Klobuchar said. 'They believe the president when he said there's stuff in there that people should see.' Several former federal prosecutors told the Associated Press that the Justice Department request to unseal grand jury transcripts in the prosecutions of Epstein and his former girlfriend, imprisoned British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, is unlikely to produce much, if anything, to satisfy the public's appetite for new revelations about the financier's crimes. Advertisement Attorney Sarah Krissoff, an assistant US attorney in Manhattan from 2008 to 2021, called the request 'a distraction.' 'The president is trying to present himself as if he's doing something here and it really is nothing,' Krissoff told the Associated Press in a weekend interview. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche made the request Friday, asking judges to unseal transcripts from grand jury proceedings that resulted in indictments against Epstein and Maxwell, saying 'transparency to the American public is of the utmost importance to this Administration.' Krissoff and Joshua Naftalis, a Manhattan federal prosecutor for 11 years before entering private practice in 2023, said grand jury presentations are purposely brief. Naftalis said Southern District prosecutors present just enough to a grand jury to get an indictment but 'it's not going to be everything the FBI and investigators have figured out about Maxwell and Epstein.' 'People want the entire file from however long. That's just not what this is,' he said, estimating that the transcripts, at most, probably amount to a few hundred pages. 'It's not going to be much,' Krissoff said, estimating the length at as little as 60 pages 'because the Southern District of New York's practice is to put as little information as possible into the grand jury.' 'They basically spoon feed the indictment to the grand jury. That's what we're going to see,' she said. 'I just think it's not going to be that interesting. ... I don't think it's going to be anything new.' This article originally appeared in

Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid
Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson entered the race for governor on Sunday as the 2026 Republican primary field gets more crowded. Republicans are keen to recapture the governor's office in GOP-leaning Kansas after Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly narrowly won a second four-year term in 2022. Kelly is term-limited and cannot run again. Masterson, a small-business owner, has been a state senator representing a district in eastern Kansas since 2009. He became Senate president in 2021. He previously served in the Kansas House of Representatives from 2005 to 2008. Other Republicans in the 2026 governor's race include Secretary of State Scott Schwab, who built his public profile pushing back against unfounded election conspiracy theories, and former Gov. Jeff Colyer. Colyer was elevated to the office for about a year in 2018 after former Gov. Sam Brownback resigned. He failed to get past the primary in that year's gubernatorial election, then entered the 2022 governor's race but dropped out early after being diagnosed with prostate cancer.

Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid
Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid

Hamilton Spectator

time2 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Kansas Republican senate president announces 2026 gubernatorial bid

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson entered the race for governor on Sunday as the 2026 Republican primary field gets more crowded. Republicans are keen to recapture the governor's office in GOP-leaning Kansas after Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly narrowly won a second four-year term in 2022. Kelly is term-limited and cannot run again. Masterson, a small-business owner, has been a state senator representing a district in eastern Kansas since 2009. He became Senate president in 2021. He previously served in the Kansas House of Representatives from 2005 to 2008. Other Republicans in the 2026 governor's race include Secretary of State Scott Schwab , who built his public profile pushing back against unfounded election conspiracy theories, and former Gov. Jeff Colyer . Colyer was elevated to the office for about a year in 2018 after former Gov. Sam Brownback resigned. He failed to get past the primary in that year's gubernatorial election, then entered the 2022 governor's race but dropped out early after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store