All Roll Calls
Yes: 48 • No: 52
Sponsored By: Senator Reed, Jack [D-RI]
In Committee
Would disapprove the CFPB rule that withdrew the 2021 Examinations for Risks to Active‑Duty Servicemembers and Their Covered Dependents rule, keeping the 2021 exam rule in effect.
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Reed, Jack [D-RI]
RI • D
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 48 • No: 52
senate vote • 5/13/2026
On the Motion to Proceed S.J.Res. 132
Yes: 48 • No: 52
S2823 — FAMILY Act
Creates a national paid family and medical leave insurance program that would pay monthly benefits to people who take caregiving or medical leave. The program centers administration at the Social Security Administration and sets eligibility, benefit formulas, state grant rules, and data-sharing to prevent fraud. - Families: People taking leave for caregiving or a serious health condition would get monthly wage-replacement benefits based on a tiered formula that starts at 85% for low wages and steps down for higher earnings. Initial benefit thresholds in 2026 include $1,257 and $3,500 and the law sets a minimum and maximum monthly benefit. - Workers and applicants: Eligibility would depend on wages or self-employment income over the most recent eight quarters with an initial earnings test of $2,000 in 2026. Benefit periods are measured over a year, applications can request retroactive coverage up to 365 days, and the bill requires certifications and appeals processes. - States, employers, and administration: The bill preserves and coordinates with state leave laws by creating a "legacy State" category and an annual grant program starting in 2027 for qualifying States, with up to 7% allowed for administrative costs. It would create an Office of Paid Family and Medical Leave inside SSA to run the program, share data with federal and state partners, and require periodic GAO reviews.
S3990 — PrEP Access and Coverage Act of 2026
Guarantee broad access to PrEP and PEP across federal public and private health programs. The bill would create a statutory framework requiring coverage of FDA‑approved HIV prevention drugs, related laboratory tests, and clinical follow‑up while limiting cost‑sharing and removing most prior‑authorization barriers across Medicaid, Medicare, CHIP, FEHB, VA, DoD, Indian Health Service, and private plans. - People at risk and families: Would gain coverage for PrEP/PEP drugs, diagnostics, and monitoring with little or no cost‑sharing. HIPAA changes would let people use PrEP/PEP benefits on family plans without informing other plan members. - Community providers and clinics: Establishes a PrEP/PEP funding program to award grants to states, tribes, Federally Qualified Health Centers, rural clinics, and other eligible entities for drugs, lab tests, outreach, adherence support, provider education, and program administration. Recipients must report annually and Congress would receive five‑year reports on grant impact. - Insurers, employers, and regulators: Would require group health plans and issuers to submit annual claims and cost‑sharing data and lets HHS, Labor, and Treasury monitor compliance and issue guidance. The bill also bans life, disability, and long‑term care insurers from denying or pricing coverage based on PrEP/PEP use and creates a private right of action for violations.
S2763 — Keep Billionaires Out of Social Security Act
Insulate the Social Security Administration from political interference and fund its operations. This bill would limit political appointee access to beneficiary systems, require career-led internal offices, and create new funding for customer service and grants. - Keeps SSA field office presence and staffing at January 1, 2025 levels and limits closures. It requires maintained live-operator access, improved phone metrics within 12 months, expanded online applications, and codifies overpayment recovery of up to 10 percent of a benefit or $10 per month. - Creates grant programs for disability advocacy and local assistance. It authorizes $25.0 million for State protection and advocacy grants for FY2026–2030 and $15.0 million per year for FY2026–2030 to fund at least 10 community grants annually, with minimum awards of $500,000 and required beneficiary representation on governance boards. - Restructures SSA governance and funding rules. It removes SSA from Department of Government Efficiency oversight, restricts political access to beneficiary data with civil and criminal penalties, reestablishes three Deputy Commissioner-led internal offices, sets an annual appropriation formula equal to 1.2 percent of specified benefit payments beginning FY2026, requires Medicare administration funding from HI and SMI trust funds, and creates a $2.0 billion Customer Experience Fund for FY2026–FY2035 while excluding SSA administrative costs from certain budget enforcement calculations. The bill would authorize significant new administrative spending and dedicated funding mechanisms and would change how SSA administration is counted in federal budget enforcement.
S2234 — Reducing Homelessness Through Program Reform Act
More flexibility for homelessness funding and cross‑sector coordination. This bill would let HUD and local homelessness programs shift and extend funding timelines, relax some paperwork and inspection rules, and create new health‑housing demonstrations and an advisory committee.
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.
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