Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 17B— - IMPOUNDMENT CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - CONGRESSIONAL CONSIDERATION OF PROPOSED RESCISSIONS, RESERVATIONS, AND DEFERRALS OF BUDGET AUTHORITY › § 688
Rescission bills (bills that try to cancel spending the President asked to cut) and impoundment resolutions (resolutions about temporarily delaying budget authority) must be sent to the proper House or Senate committee. If the committee does not act on the bill or resolution within 25 calendar days of continuous session after it was introduced, a supporter can move to force the committee to let the full chamber consider it. That motion must be backed by one-fifth of the Members (with a quorum present), can only be made by someone who favors the bill or resolution, and gets special priority. Debate on that motion in the House is limited to 1 hour split evenly between supporters and opponents; in the Senate the majority and minority leaders (or their designees) split control. No amendments to the motion are allowed, and the vote cannot be reopened. Once a committee has reported a rescission bill or impoundment resolution or has been discharged, the full chamber may move to consider it at any time; that motion is not debatable. In the House, debate on the measure is limited to 2 hours, divided equally for and against. In the Senate, total debate on a rescission bill or impoundment resolution is limited to 10 hours, with set limits for amendments (2 hours) and amendments to amendments (1 hour). Many procedural moves (postponing, appeals, some recommit or amendment motions for impoundment resolutions) must be decided without debate or are not allowed. Time limits for conference reports and related motions are also set, including a 3-calendar-day wait (excluding weekends and holidays) before Senate consideration of a conference report and specific short debate limits if the report is considered or defeated.
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2 U.S.C. § 688
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73