All Roll Calls
Yes: 272 • No: 253
Sponsored By: Representative Pfluger
Became Law
Invalidates EPA's Waste Emissions Charge for Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems rule. The law prevents the Environmental Protection Agency from enforcing, implementing, or relying on any part of that rule, including its procedures for facilitating compliance, netting, and exemptions.
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Pfluger
TX • R
Rep. Arrington, Jodey C. [R-TX-19]
TX • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Balderson
OH • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Evans (CO)
CO • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Carey, Mike [R-OH-15]
OH • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Rulli, Michael A. [R-OH-6]
OH • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Palmer, Gary J. [R-AL-6]
AL • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Crenshaw
TX • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Joyce (PA)
PA • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Weber, Randy K. Sr. [R-TX-14]
TX • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Latta
OH • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Langworthy
NY • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Carter, Earl L. "Buddy" [R-GA-1]
GA • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Miller-Meeks, Mariannette [R-IA-1]
IA • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Griffith, H. Morgan [R-VA-9]
VA • R
Sponsored 2/13/2025
Allen
GA • R
Sponsored 2/14/2025
Rep. Grothman, Glenn [R-WI-6]
WI • R
Sponsored 2/14/2025
Schmidt
KS • R
Sponsored 2/24/2025
Goldman (TX)
TX • R
Sponsored 2/24/2025
Fedorchak
ND • R
Sponsored 2/25/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 272 • No: 253
senate vote • 2/27/2025
On the Joint Resolution H.J.Res. 35
Yes: 52 • No: 47
house vote • 2/26/2025
On Passage
Yes: 220 • No: 206
HR703 — Main Street Tax Certainty Act
This bill would permanently preserve the qualified business income (QBI) deduction by removing the sunset provision in Internal Revenue Code section 199A. The change would apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2025, so the deduction would be available for 2026 and later tax years. It achieves this by striking subsection (i) of section 199A and setting that effective date. Taxpayers with qualified business income would continue to claim the QBI deduction under the existing Section 199A rules for those years.
HR1301 — Death Tax Repeal Act
This bill would repeal the federal estate tax and the generation‑skipping transfer tax. It would also reshape gift tax rules by keeping tiered rates but creating a $10 million lifetime exemption indexed for inflation. - Heirs of people who die on or after enactment would not owe the federal estate tax. This removes that tax from those estates. - Donors and high‑net‑worth individuals would still face a gift tax, but under a tiered schedule from 18% to 35% and a $10 million lifetime exemption that is indexed for inflation after 2011. - Generation‑skipping transfers made on or after enactment would not be subject to the GST tax. Qualified domestic trusts for surviving spouses of decedents who died before enactment would follow transitional rules, including changed treatment of distributions after a 10‑year period beginning on the enactment date.
HR38 — Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act of 2025
National concealed-carry reciprocity. This bill would create nationwide recognition of state concealed-carry licenses so people with a valid photo ID and a state permit or the right to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in many other States. - Gun owners and travelers: People not federally prohibited from firearms possession who hold a state concealed-carry license or are entitled to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in States that issue permits or do not ban concealed carry. Machine guns and destructive devices are excluded. It would take effect 90 days after enactment. - State and property rights: States would keep the power to prohibit or restrict concealed carry on private property and on State or local government property. The bill also lists federal public lands and agencies where carrying would be allowed in publicly accessible areas, including National Park units and Forest Service land. - Criminal and civil protections: Officers may not arrest absent probable cause that the carry falls outside the law and prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt when the defense is raised. Prevailing defendants can recover reasonable attorney fees and may sue for deprivation of rights with damages.
HR1 — An act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to title II of H. Con. Res. 14.
A household-budget shakeup - changing how much help some families get for groceries, and for parents, reshaping the child tax credit and child/dependent care breaks that can move refund sizes and take-home pay, while also tightening some energy incentives and immigration fees and pumping new money into defense, border operations, health, and student aid. - Grocery help & eligibility: Updates the formula used to set SNAP (food stamp) benefits and tweaks work/utility rules—so benefit amounts could shift for some households. It also tightens eligibility for certain immigrants. - Refunds for families: Reworks key family tax breaks—especially the child tax credit and child/dependent care credits—which could change the size and timing of tax refunds (and in some cases take-home pay) for parents. - Energy bills & “made in America” rules: Scales back or ends several clean-energy and manufacturing tax credits and adds tougher domestic-content/foreign-entity limits—changes that can ripple into utility rates, home-upgrade costs, and where new jobs/investment land. - New fees + big funding shifts: Sets new immigration service fee schedules and moves major federal dollars toward defense, border operations, health, and student aid—reshaping who pays fees and where government spending shows up. Raises federal borrowing authority by 5 trillion dollars, and potentially more budget pressure later.
HR425 — Repealing Big Brother Overreach Act
Repeals the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA). The bill would remove the CTA and the amendments enacted under it from the U.S. Code and then make targeted fixes to related laws. Those edits include striking references to section 5336 in Title 31, changing language in section 5322, repealing section 6502 of the Anti‑Money Laundering Act of 2020, and removing a subsection from section 6509. The draft text also contains a literal '<all>' markup at the end of the section.
HRES719 — Honoring the life and legacy of Charles "Charlie" James Kirk.
Condemns political violence. The resolution condemns the assassination of Charles 'Charlie' James Kirk, honors his life and leadership, and urges swift justice while offering sympathy to his family.
Surfaced from PRIA's policy knowledge graph — ranked by signal strength, connected by evidence.
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