As part of the recent debt ceiling agreement, lawmakers agreed that if one chamber approved a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution the other chamber would vote on that same plan. Next week, House Republicans will bring forth their proposed amendment – the very same amendment that passed the House but fell one vote short in the Senate back in 1995. So what does this version of the amendment prescribe? Should conservatives be worried that spending is not tied to a percentage of the economy? Can this pass? We ask Virginia Rep. Bob Goodlatte, who is leading the push for the amendment in the House.