All Roll Calls
Yes: 48 • No: 51
Sponsored By: Senator Sen. Schiff, Adam B. [D-CA]
In Committee
This bill would require the President to end the use of U.S. Armed Forces for hostilities against groups designated as foreign terrorist organizations or specially designated global terrorists on or after Feb 20, 2025, and against states where they operate and certain drug‑trafficking non‑state groups. It limits military action unless Congress issues a declaration of war or a specific authorization for the use of military force, while preserving narrow exceptions for self‑defense and authorized counternarcotics support.
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1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
This bill would tell the President to stop using U.S. Armed Forces for hostilities against groups named on or after February 20, 2025 as foreign terrorist or global terrorist organizations. It would also cover the states where those groups operate and some non-state drug-trafficking groups. Congress would have to declare war or pass a specific authorization to continue such hostilities. The bill would still let the U.S. defend itself from an attack or imminent attack. It would allow forces to help civil authorities for authorized counternarcotics operations. The bill would say drug trafficking alone is not an armed attack.
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Sen. Schiff, Adam B. [D-CA]
CA • D
Sen. Kaine, Tim [D-VA]
VA • D
Sponsored 9/18/2025
Sen. Wyden, Ron [D-OR]
OR • D
Sponsored 10/3/2025
Sen. Sanders, Bernard [I-VT]
VT • I
Sponsored 10/3/2025
Sen. Merkley, Jeff [D-OR]
OR • D
Sponsored 10/8/2025
Sen. Paul, Rand [R-KY]
KY • R
Sponsored 10/8/2025
Sen. Padilla, Alex [D-CA]
CA • D
Sponsored 10/8/2025
Sen. Van Hollen, Chris [D-MD]
MD • D
Sponsored 10/8/2025
Tammy Duckworth
IL • D
Sponsored 10/8/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 48 • No: 51
senate vote • 10/8/2025
On the Motion to Discharge S.J.Res. 83
Yes: 48 • No: 51
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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.
SJRES104 — A joint resolution to direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against the Islamic Republic of Iran that have not been authorized by Congress.
Directs removal of U.S. Armed Forces from hostilities in or against Iran unless Congress authorizes the use of force. It would require the President to withdraw U.S. forces from Iran-related hostilities that lack a declaration of war or a specific statutory authorization, while preserving certain defensive authorities, intelligence sharing, and defensive support for allies. - Service members and families: Signals a legal limit on Iran-focused combat deployments that lack congressional approval, which could change mission scope and timelines for units assigned to the region. - Congress: Reaffirms Congress's sole power to declare war by conditioning continued hostilities with Iran on a declaration of war or a specific authorization for use of military force. - Allies and partners: Keeps authority to share intelligence with Israel and other nations and to provide defensive materiel and support against retaliatory attacks by Iran or its proxies. - Executive branch: Preserves the President's ability to defend the United States and its personnel and facilities from attacks and to collect and analyze intelligence related to Iran threats.
SJRES90 — A joint resolution to direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against Venezuela that have not been authorized by Congress.
End unauthorized U.S. hostilities in or against Venezuela. This joint resolution would direct the President to terminate the use of United States Armed Forces for hostilities within or against Venezuela unless Congress declares war or specifically authorizes the use of military force. It also preserves the right to defend the United States from an armed attack or an imminent threat. - U.S. Armed Forces: Forces engaged in hostilities without congressional authorization would be ordered to stop, with termination taking effect immediately if the measure were enacted and no exception applied. - President and executive branch: It would limit presidential war-making authority in the Venezuela context by requiring explicit congressional authorization for continued hostilities while allowing self-defense responses. - Congress and public oversight: The bill emphasizes full briefings, public debate, and cites expedited procedures for Congress to consider removal of forces from imminent hostilities.
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.
S1068 — Putting Veterans First Act of 2025
Reinstating and protecting veterans and military‑family federal employees. This bill would undo removals, demotions, and suspensions of veterans, military spouses, caregivers, survivors, and reserve members that occurred between January 20, 2025 and enactment, restore back pay and benefits, and tighten rules on VA personnel actions, contracts, and public reporting. - Affected federal workers and families: Eligible employees would be restored or receive back pay and benefits, get up to 90 days of reimbursed mental health care, and may resign after restoration without forfeiting pay. - VA patients and staff: The VA would face limits on hiring freezes, office closures, and reductions in force, must justify major personnel actions and provide a 180-day window before RIFs, and must publish weekly workload and community-care wait-time data. - Contractors and veteran-owned small businesses: Contracts canceled in mass-cancellation efforts since January 20, 2025 would be reinstated, mass cancellations are paused pending reviews, and future proposed cancellations must identify Service‑Disabled Veteran‑Owned and Veteran‑Owned small businesses and wait 30 days before proceeding.
SRES723 — A resolution honoring the life of Dirk Arthur Kempthorne, former United States Senator for the State of Idaho.
Honors Dirk Kempthorne’s decades of public service and conservation leadership. The resolution summarizes his life and career, noting his 1951 birth and University of Idaho degree and his service as Boise mayor, a U.S. senator, Idaho’s 30th governor, and U.S. Secretary of the Interior. It highlights achievements such as Boise’s downtown revitalization, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, Safe Drinking Water Act amendments, creation of state environmental offices and GARVEE transportation bonds, conservation and wildfire work, and support for veterans including scholarships tied to the USS Idaho. The Senate expresses sorrow at his death, directs the Secretary to send the enrolled resolution to his family, and orders adjournment as a mark of respect.
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