All Roll Calls
Yes: 316 • No: 303
Sponsored By: Representative Fedorchak
Became Law
Disapproves the Bureau of Land Management's North Dakota Field Office Record of Decision and Approved Resource Management Plan. The resolution overturns that plan and prevents it from taking effect.
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Fedorchak
ND • R
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 316 • No: 303
senate vote • 10/9/2025
On the Joint Resolution H.J.Res. 105
Yes: 50 • No: 45
senate vote • 10/8/2025
On the Motion to Proceed H.J.Res. 105
Yes: 51 • No: 47
house vote • 9/3/2025
On Passage
Yes: 215 • No: 211
HR6955 — Main Street Act
Tailors federal banking rules to support community and small banks. It would also speed new bank formation and merger reviews while adding formal appeals, agency transparency, and targeted resolution tools. - Community banks and new charters: Would phase in federal capital requirements for newly insured institutions over three years and let them request business‑plan deviations with expedited agency action. Raises the Community Bank Leverage Ratio asset cutoff to $15 billion and adds a short‑form Call Report option. - Rural banks, credit unions, and small institutions: Defines rural depository institutions under a $10 billion asset cutoff and orders studies on rural revitalization. Creates supervisory relief for well‑managed firms with assets $6 billion or less, including limited‑scope exam cycles and combined exam options. - Mergers, resolution, and oversight: Standardizes merger completeness and decision timelines with a 30‑day completeness check and a 120‑day approval deadline, plus GAO and IG reviews of merger and failure decisions. Establishes an independent Board review for material supervisory determinations and expands transparency about global regulatory engagement.
HR4206 — CONNECT for Health Act of 2025
Expands Medicare telehealth access by removing geographic limits and ending an in-person requirement for telemental health. It would also change payment rules for clinics and require more oversight, training, and data reporting. - Medicare beneficiaries would be able to receive telehealth across geographies beginning October 1, 2025. Telemental health would no longer require a six-month in-person visit and tribal and Native Hawaiian facilities would be exempt from originating-site rules starting January 1, 2026. - Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics would be paid for telehealth under outpatient or prospective payment methods and telehealth costs as distant-site care would count as allowable PPS costs. The HHS Secretary could waive limits on which practitioner types may furnish telehealth starting October 1, 2025 with annual public comment and a three-year reassessment requirement. - The bill would strengthen program integrity funding for telehealth, require CMS to post quarterly telehealth data, and add telehealth to quality-measure reviews within 180 days. It also mandates a beneficiary engagement study and a Government Accountability Office report on hospice recertification within three years.
HR6538 — More Affordable Care Act
Health Freedom Waiver Program would let states opt out of key Affordable Care Act and related tax-code requirements if they run an invisible high‑risk pool or another approved risk‑mitigation program. It redirects premium tax credit and cost‑sharing amounts into new Trump Health Freedom Accounts for eligible residents.
HR740 — Veterans’ ACCESS Act of 2025
Faster, clearer access to VA community care and mental health treatment. This bill would set measurable drive‑time and wait‑time standards for community care, tighten timelines and appeals for denials, and standardize rapid screening and admission for residential mental health programs. - Veterans and households: Veterans would get written notice of eligibility within two business days and VA would have to schedule primary, mental health, and most extended care within a 30‑minute average drive and 20 days of request. Specialty care would be scheduled within a 60‑minute drive and 28 days. - Mental health patients and families: The bill would require a standardized clinical screen within 48 hours of an admission request and admission of priority cases within 48 hours of determination. Placement must weigh veteran preferences and proximity to social supports and VA must offer accredited non‑VA options and transportation help if it cannot meet standards. - Providers and VA modernization: Provider claim deadlines would extend from 180 days to 1 year. The bill would reform the Center for Innovation with a required budget line item, create a three‑year pilot in at least five sites to allow outpatient mental health and substance use care without referrals, and require an interactive online self‑service appointment and appeals tool with a plan due in 180 days.
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."
HR3235 — MOMS Act
A national pregnancy and postpartum resource directory would centralize local and online supports for pregnant and postpartum women. The bill would also fund nonprofit and telehealth programs and allow mothers to seek child support for an unborn child. - Families: Pregnant and postpartum women would get a tailored pregnancy.gov directory that lists nearby and online resources by ZIP code and up to 100 miles. The site must operate in multiple languages, include a user assessment with consent for outreach, and protect personal identifying information. - States and nonprofits: Grants would fund state systems and eligible nonprofits to provide direct services like medical care, housing, childcare, parenting education, and substance use counseling. Resources and grantees could not be entities that perform, refer for, or promote abortions, and appropriations are authorized through 2030. - Fathers and child support: Mothers could request establishment and enforcement of child support for an unborn child, with paternity measures allowed only with the mother's consent and required to pose no risk to the unborn child. These child-support provisions would take effect two years after enactment.
Surfaced from PRIA's policy knowledge graph — ranked by signal strength, connected by evidence.
The Federal Open Market Committee is the body that sets U.S. monetary policy — specifically the federal funds rate target and the direction of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet — and its decisions m
The federal government distributes more than $800 billion per year in grants — more money than the entire U.S. defense discretionary budget — yet most Americans have no mental model of how grant fundi
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors is the governing body of the Federal Reserve System and the most powerful financial regulatory institution in the world — a claim that rests not just on its mone
The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 12 U.S.C. §§ 1841–1852 gives the Federal Reserve Board regulatory authority over bank holding companies — the parent corporations that own or control commercial ba