All Roll Calls
Yes: 237 • No: 140
Sponsored By: Representative Rep. Green, Al [D-TX-9]
Introduced
Abuse of presidential power is the core charge in this resolution. This resolution would impeach President Donald J. Trump. It charges him with calling for the execution of six Democratic lawmakers and with threats and intimidation of federal judges that put the judiciary and court personnel at risk.
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Rep. Green, Al [D-TX-9]
TX • D
Rep. Carson, Andre [D-IN-7]
IN • D
Sponsored 12/11/2025
Rep. Williams, Nikema [D-GA-5]
GA • D
Sponsored 1/30/2026
All Roll Calls
Yes: 237 • No: 140
house vote • 12/11/2025
On Motion to Table
Yes: 237 • No: 140
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HR3971 — Domestic Workers Bill of Rights Act
Extending workplace rights to domestic workers. The bill would set enforceable labor standards for household workers, add overtime and live‑in protections, require written agreements, create a Domestic Employee Standards Board, and push Medicaid rules to cover home care workers.
HR6644 — 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act
Expands federal tools to build, preserve, and protect housing. This bill reorganizes HUD programs, creates new repair and disaster funds, sets rules to speed homebuilding, and limits large investor purchases to free more homes for individuals. - Low‑income families and public housing tenants get new supports and flexibility. The bill authorizes an Escrow Expansion Pilot for up to 5,000 families, expands a Moving‑to‑Work cohort for up to 25 PHAs, and broadens HOME eligibility to households up to 100% AMI. - Homebuyers and local markets face a new cap on big investors. Firms that control 350 or more single‑family homes are barred from new purchases, must sell many holdings within 7 years in some cases, and face civil penalties up to $1.0 million or 3× the purchase price that can fund HOME activities. - Homeowners, builders, and disaster‑affected communities gain repair and resilience programs plus construction modernization. The bill funds a Whole‑Home Repairs Pilot, tightens manufactured and modular housing rules and certifications, and creates a Disaster Recovery Fund with preliminary grants up to $5 million and a 70% low‑ and moderate‑income benefit floor.
HR3069 — Medicare for All Act
This bill would create a national health insurance program called "Medicare for All" to provide universal, comprehensive health coverage for every U.S. resident. It sets the benefit package, bans cost‑sharing for covered care, negotiates drug and device prices, and phases existing federal coverage into the new system during a multi‑year transition. - Families and children: Covers maternity care, pediatric services, mental health, prescription drugs, dental, vision, and more with no out‑of‑pocket costs for covered items. Children under 19 become eligible one year after enactment. - Older adults and people with disabilities: Establishes an entitlement to medically necessary long‑term services and supports in home and community settings, prioritizes independence and supports activities of daily living, and removes the 24‑month Medicare waiting period for people with disabilities. - Providers and the health system: Creates regional offices, pays institutional providers with negotiated quarterly global budgets and individual clinicians via a national fee schedule, restricts private contracting for covered services for two years, and gives the Secretary authority to negotiate prices and, if needed, license manufacture of drugs.
HR4862 — LOAN Act
Doubles the Federal Pell Grant by setting new maximum awards that start at $10,000 in 2026–27 and rise to $14,000 by 2031 and then index to CPI. It would also remake student loan rules by creating two repayment paths, expanding forgiveness and refinancing, and eliminating interest capitalization. - Students and families would see bigger Pell awards and broader eligibility. The bill treats recent means-tested-benefit recipients as having a Student Aid Index of −$1,500 and restores Pell up to 18 semesters while allowing certain first postbaccalaureate grants. - Borrowers would get two main repayment choices: a 10-year Fixed Repayment Plan or a codified Income-Driven Repayment Plan. Fixed plans set a $50 minimum monthly payment and new loan rates tied to Treasury yields with a 5.0% floor for loans made on or after July 1, 2026, plus a Secretary-run refinancing program for older loans and an end to interest capitalization. - Public servants and people in default would get major changes to forgiveness and rehab. Public Service Loan Forgiveness would require 96 qualifying payments and would count many IDR payments and deferments, expand qualifying employment to independent contractors, add automatic enrollment and a borrower portal, and create a default reduction and rehabilitation framework.
HR5361 — George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2025
Creates a sweeping federal framework to boost police accountability and transparency through a national misconduct registry, tighter use‑of‑force standards, and funded independent investigations. It also links federal grants to accreditation, anti‑profiling rules, body‑camera rules, and training for officers.
HR4664 — Stop Shackling and Detaining Pregnant Women Act
This bill would create a strong presumption against detention and a prohibition on shackling for pregnant, lactating, and postpartum people. It would pair that presumption with health-first standards, regular case reviews, and public reporting to enforce humane treatment. - Pregnant and postpartum individuals would get guaranteed access to pregnancy testing and a wide range of medical care. That includes prenatal and postpartum care, labor and delivery services, lactation support, contraception continuation, substance use disorder treatment, and abortion services when applicable. - Detention rules would favor release and require routine oversight. The bill would mandate weekly individualized reviews, a 72-hour review window, and release within 24 hours if detention is no longer justified. - Facilities and agencies would face tight limits on restraints and stronger transparency. Most restraints and specific types would be barred except in narrowly documented emergencies, and facilities would do quarterly reporting, yearly audits by the Department of Homeland Security, annual staff training, and privacy-protected public disclosures.
Surfaced from PRIA's policy knowledge graph — ranked by signal strength, connected by evidence.
The Wilderness Act of 1964 16 U.S.C. §§ 1131–1136 created the National Wilderness Preservation System — a network of federally owned lands permanently protected in their natural, undeveloped condition
The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 16 U.S.C. §§ 1271–1287 established the national policy that certain rivers with outstanding natural, scenic, recreational, and historic values shall be preserved
The Visa Waiver Program allows citizens of 42 designated countries to travel to the United States for tourism or business for up to 90 days without obtaining a visa — the primary way most European, Ja
The Department of Veterans Affairs provides burial and memorial benefits under 38 U.S.C. Chapters 23 and 24 that significantly reduce and in some cases eliminate funeral costs for eligible veterans an