All Roll Calls
Yes: 326 • No: 295
Sponsored By: Representative Clyde
Became Law
Blocks the Department of Energy rule on Energy Conservation Program certification, labeling, and enforcement for certain consumer products and commercial equipment. The rule is disapproved and shall have no force or effect, so the Department of Energy may not implement, enforce, or rely on those certification, labeling, or enforcement provisions.
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Clyde
GA • R
Tenney
NY • R
Sponsored 2/24/2025
Schmidt
KS • R
Sponsored 2/24/2025
Miller (IL)
IL • R
Sponsored 2/24/2025
LaMalfa
CA • R
Sponsored 3/3/2025
Haridopolos
FL • R
Sponsored 3/3/2025
Lee (FL)
FL • R
Sponsored 3/3/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 326 • No: 295
senate vote • 4/30/2025
On the Joint Resolution H.J.Res. 42
Yes: 52 • No: 46
senate vote • 4/29/2025
On the Motion to Proceed H.J.Res. 42
Yes: 52 • No: 46
house vote • 3/5/2025
On Passage
Yes: 222 • No: 203
Surfaced from PRIA's policy knowledge graph — ranked by signal strength, connected by evidence.
The federal government runs two closely related conservation-workforce pipelines on public lands: the Youth Conservation Corps YCC and the Public Lands Corps PLC. YCC is a summer employment program fo
The Uruguay Round Agreements Act URAA of 1994 19 U.S.C. §§ 3501–3624 implemented U.S. membership in the World Trade Organization WTO and incorporated the Uruguay Round trade agreements — the broadest
The World Trade Center Health Program is a federally funded health benefits program that provides free medical monitoring and treatment to those who were exposed to the toxic dust, debris, and fumes f
Workers' compensation is the United States' primary workplace injury system — a no-fault insurance program where employees who are injured on the job receive medical coverage and partial wage replacem
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HR7 — No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion and Abortion Insurance Full Disclosure Act of 2025
Bans taxpayer funding for abortions and for health plans that include abortion coverage. The bill lets people buy separate abortion-only coverage paid entirely with non-federal funds, while preventing ACA premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions from applying to plans that include abortion. - Families and ACA enrollees: If an Exchange plan covers abortion you cannot use premium tax credits or cost-sharing reductions for that plan. You may buy a separate abortion-only plan but it is not eligible for those federal subsidies. - Small employers: Small-employer health insurance tax credits exclude plans that include abortion coverage. Employers can offer separate abortion plans only if those plans are funded without federal money. - Insurers and multi-State plans: No multi-State qualified health plan sold in an Exchange may provide abortion benefits paid with federal funds. Insurers must clearly disclose abortion coverage and any surcharge tied to abortion services in enrollment materials. - States and providers: States and non-federal providers may offer abortion coverage funded entirely with non-federal funds. The bill preserves exceptions for rape, incest, and life-threatening pregnancies and explicitly applies rules to the District of Columbia.
HR1181 — Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act
Stops payment systems from assigning merchant codes that single out firearms sellers. This bill would prohibit payment card networks and covered entities from requiring or assigning merchant category codes that identify a retailer as selling firearms, ammunition, accessories, or firearm components. - Firearms retailers: Businesses could not be assigned MCCs that are used only or primarily for firearms retailers, which limits one way transactions could be labeled. - Payment card networks and covered entities: Networks and processors would be barred from requiring merchants to use or from assigning MCCs that identify a business as a firearms retailer. - Federal enforcement and oversight: The Attorney General would set up a complaint process within 90 days after enactment, investigate complaints, demand remediation within 30 days, and may seek federal injunctions. The bill would preempt state and local rules on assigning or disclosing these MCCs while allowing narrow fraud and security compliance exceptions and require annual reports to Congress on investigations and effectiveness.
HR38 — Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act of 2025
National concealed-carry reciprocity. This bill would create nationwide recognition of state concealed-carry licenses so people with a valid photo ID and a state permit or the right to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in many other States. - Gun owners and travelers: People not federally prohibited from firearms possession who hold a state concealed-carry license or are entitled to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in States that issue permits or do not ban concealed carry. Machine guns and destructive devices are excluded. It would take effect 90 days after enactment. - State and property rights: States would keep the power to prohibit or restrict concealed carry on private property and on State or local government property. The bill also lists federal public lands and agencies where carrying would be allowed in publicly accessible areas, including National Park units and Forest Service land. - Criminal and civil protections: Officers may not arrest absent probable cause that the carry falls outside the law and prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt when the defense is raised. Prevailing defendants can recover reasonable attorney fees and may sue for deprivation of rights with damages.
HRES719 — Honoring the life and legacy of Charles "Charlie" James Kirk.
Condemns political violence. The resolution condemns the assassination of Charles 'Charlie' James Kirk, honors his life and leadership, and urges swift justice while offering sympathy to his family.
HR21 — Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act
Mandates care and penalties for infants born alive after an abortion. This bill would set standards of care, require reporting, create criminal penalties, and allow civil suits when an infant is born alive following an abortion. - Women and families: A woman on whom an abortion is performed may sue anyone who violates the law and recover objectively verifiable medical and psychological damages, punitive damages, and statutory damages equal to three times the cost of the abortion. Courts must award reasonable attorney's fees to prevailing plaintiffs and may award fees to defendants if a suit is frivolous. - Health care practitioners and facility employees: Any practitioner present at a birth resulting from an abortion must exercise the same professional skill, care, and diligence as for any other live-born infant of the same gestational age. Practitioners or employees who know of a failure to comply must immediately report the violation to appropriate State or Federal law enforcement. - Criminal and statutory consequences: Violators face fines, up to 5 years in prison, or both, and anyone who intentionally kills a born-alive infant is punished under the murder statute. The bill also updates chapter headings and adds statutory definitions for "abortion" and "attempt."
HR1422 — Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025
Expands U.S. sanctions on Iran's oil and petrochemical sectors to cut off funding for weapons, missiles, drones, and terrorism. The Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025 broadens who can be sanctioned and adds immigration and enforcement tools to target evasion and facilitation.