Credit: Photo via Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections/Facebook
A House panel Monday approved a proposal that would make it harder to pass state constitutional amendments.

The House Ethics, Elections & Open Government Subcommittee voted 11-6 to back the proposal (HJR 335), filed by Rep. Rick Roth, R-West Palm Beach.

Under the proposal, constitutional amendments would need support from 66.67 percent of voters to pass, up from the current 60 percent.

โ€œI canโ€™t think of a better way to protect our Constitution than to raise the bar,โ€ Roth said. Roth has repeatedly proposed the change in past years, but it has not cleared the Legislature.

If approved during this yearโ€™s session, it would go on the 2024 ballot. That is because requiring the higher voter threshold would, in and of itself, need a constitutional amendment.

Groups have used the ballot initiative process to pass constitutional amendments on a series of major issues, such as allowing medical marijuana and increasing the minimum wage.

Opponents of Rothโ€™s proposal say groups have needed to pass constitutional amendments because the Legislature has ignored the publicโ€™s wishes on issues. They said Rothโ€™s proposal would limit the ability to make such changes.

โ€œI think that this (proposal) is really doubting our constituents that we serve and their ability to make informed decisions,โ€ Rep. Ashley Gantt, D-Miami, said.