All Roll Calls
Yes: 47 • No: 51
Sponsored By: Senator Sen. Kaine, Tim [D-VA]
Failed
End the national energy emergency declared in Executive Order 14156. This joint resolution would terminate that emergency under the National Emergencies Act and discontinue the emergency status and any authorities or measures conferred by the declaration. It would not itself establish new energy policy, programs, or funding beyond ending those emergency authorities.
Personalized for You
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Free Policy Watch
Pick a topic. PRIA runs your household against live legislation and sends you a free personalized readout.
Pick a topic to get started
Sen. Kaine, Tim [D-VA]
VA • D
Sen. Heinrich, Martin [D-NM]
NM • D
Sponsored 7/31/2025
Sen. Whitehouse, Sheldon [D-RI]
RI • D
Sponsored 9/16/2025
Sen. Booker, Cory A. [D-NJ]
NJ • D
Sponsored 9/16/2025
Sen. Sanders, Bernard [I-VT]
VT • I
Sponsored 9/16/2025
Sen. Reed, Jack [D-RI]
RI • D
Sponsored 9/17/2025
Chris Van Hollen
MD • D
Sponsored 9/18/2025
Sen. Markey, Edward J. [D-MA]
MA • D
Sponsored 9/18/2025
Sen. Shaheen, Jeanne [D-NH]
NH • D
Sponsored 10/7/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 47 • No: 51
senate vote • 10/8/2025
On the Joint Resolution S.J.Res. 71
Yes: 47 • No: 51
Take It Personal
Take the PRIA Score to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.
Already have an account? Sign in
S51 — Washington, D.C. Admission Act
This bill would admit the District of Columbia as the State of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth, giving its residents full congressional representation. It would also carve out a separate federal 'Capital' around core federal buildings and set a staged transition for courts, services, and federal property. - Residents: District residents would gain two Senators and one Representative immediately upon admission and the current non‑voting Delegate office would be repealed. - Territory and federal limits: A defined Capital area including the Capitol, White House, Supreme Court, and adjacent federal lands would remain under U.S. title or jurisdiction and generally would not be subject to state taxation except where Congress permits. - Courts, justice, and transition supports: The bill would keep federal prosecution support, U.S. Marshals services, pretrial and public defender arrangements, and Bureau of Prisons housing rules during transition; it would provide a temporary Federal Medical Assistance Percentage uplift for five years and establish an 18‑member Statehood Transition Commission to oversee the change.
S1503 — Equality Act
Treat sexual orientation and gender identity as forms of sex discrimination across federal law. The bill would explicitly add sexual orientation and gender identity to federal sex‑discrimination protections and apply those rules across many statutes and programs.
S2295 — Child Care for Working Families Act
This bill creates a new, comprehensive federal entitlement for children from birth through five that guarantees access to affordable, high‑quality early care and learning. It pairs a universal preschool program with multi‑year grants to stabilize providers and new Head Start wage and expansion funding.
S1814 — Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act of 2025
Creates a mandatory, public code of conduct for the Supreme Court and federal judges. The bill would add clear disclosure, recusal, complaint, and amicus disclosure rules to increase transparency and oversight across the federal judiciary.
S852 — Richard L. Trumka Protecting the Right to Organize Act of 2025
Strengthens worker organizing rights and enforcement. The bill would expand who counts as employees and joint employers, speed representation and bargaining, require voter lists and workplace postings, and increase penalties and remedies for unfair labor practices. - Workers and jobseekers: Would broaden employee coverage and set a three-factor test that presumes employee status unless all three criteria are met. It would protect use of employer-provided electronic communications for organizing and clarify that the duration or pattern of strikes does not strip protection. - Employers and bargaining: Would require employers to provide unions detailed voter lists and timely notices. It would force a fast initial bargaining process with mandatory mediation and binding arbitration if negotiations fail. - Enforcement and remedies: Would expand National Labor Relations Board authority, allow private civil suits after a waiting period, make Board orders immediately effective, and raise civil penalties for unfair labor practices to up to $50,000 per violation and up to $100,000 for repeat or aggravated offenses.
S2150 — Women’s Health Protection Act of 2025
Guarantee nationwide protections for a person's right to obtain abortion services and a provider's right to deliver them. The Women's Health Protection Act of 2025 would create a federal rule that stops laws and rules that single out abortion or place heavier burdens on abortion than on similar medical procedures. It defines key terms, protects pre-viability care, allows post-viability care to protect life or health, and explicitly protects interstate travel and the movement of medicines, equipment, patients, and providers. - Families and patients: Would protect access to abortion before viability and allow post-viability care when needed to protect life or health. It would bar medically unnecessary in-person visit rules and stop forced disclosure of why a patient seeks care. - Health care providers: Would protect providers' ability to give abortion care including by telemedicine and across state lines, and would forbid facility, staffing, testing, or disclosure requirements that are not required for similar procedures. - States and interstate commerce: Would preempt conflicting state laws and recognize a right to travel and to assist others in getting reproductive health services across state lines. - Courts and enforcement: Would let the Attorney General sue and would create a private right of action so patients and providers can seek injunctive relief and attorney's fees. It would limit state sovereign immunity where federal law allows challenges.
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