- Potential benefitSpeeds legislative consideration and final votes on multiple bills, which supporters can say enables quicker enactment…
- Potential benefitFERC interconnection queue reform and streamlined border-crossing authorization could accelerate approval and construct…
- Potential benefitReestablishing the National Coal Council and provisions easing cross-border energy facilities may be described as suppo…
Rule for H.R. 4922, H.R. 5143, and 5 others
Pursuant to the provisions of H.Res. 722, H.Res. 707 is amended.
This resolution sets the House rules for considering a group of specific bills and related actions. It makes designated Rules Committee prints the official amendment text, waives points of order against those bills and their provisions, and limits debate to one hour (split between committee leaders) with one motion to recommit allowed. It also directs the Clerk to add specified text into another bill, extends dates in prior House rules, and temporarily suspends one statutory provision from applying to a listed joint resolution during the stated period. As a House simple resolution, it only governs House procedure and does not become law or go to the President.
This is a House-only procedural resolution that controls how the House debates and votes on the listed bills; it does not need Senate or Presidential action. It waives many procedural objections and sets limited debate and amendment rights for each bill.
This House resolution makes in order consideration of several specified bills and prescribes the terms of their consideration: it waives points of order, deems certain Rules Committee print substitute amendments adopted, limits debate to one hour plus one motion to recommit, and deems the bills as read.
The bills covered include four District of Columbia criminal-justice related measures (youth offender status, vehicular pursuit standards, lowering the age to try certain minors as adults to 14, and terminating the D.C. Judicial Nomination Commission), an FERC interconnection queue reform bill (H.R. 1047), reestablishment of the National Coal Council (H.R. 3015), streamlined approval for international border-crossing energy facilities (H.R. 3062), and technical changes to the digital commodities/central-bank provisions in H.R. 3633 by adding H.R. 1919.
The resolution also amends prior House resolutions to extend specified dates to March 31, 2026, and includes a provision stating that section 202 of the National Emergencies Act shall not apply during Sept 16, 2025–Mar 31, 2026 to a joint resolution terminating the national emergency declared July 30, 2025.
Based solely on content and structure, the resolution enables consideration of several controversial, high‑salience policy changes and bundles measures that would face divergent stakeholder opposition in later stages. While the rules posture can facilitate House consideration and possible passage of the individual bills there, the substantive provisions are likely to encounter strong resistance, substantial amendment, or blockage in the other chamber and at the executive‑branch review stage. The absence of clear compromise features and the federal intrusion into local governance further lower the prospects for final enactment without significant alteration.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this resolution is a clear and detailed procedural/agenda-setting instrument. It precisely identifies the bills to be considered, adopts specific committee prints as substitutes, waives points of order, and prescribes debate structure and Clerk actions. It appropriately omits fiscal analysis given its procedural nature, but provides limited anticipation of procedural edge cases and contains minimal post-execution accountability or reporting requirements.
D.C. governance and criminal-justice changes: progressives emphasize threats to local home rule and youth justice outcomes; conservatives emphasize tougher public-safety measures.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
These are examples from the analysis, not a ranked list of the most-affected groups.
- Potential burdenWaiving points of order and sharply limiting debate reduces opportunities for amendment, extended analysis, and minorit…
- Local governmentsProvisions that lower the age at which some minors can be tried as adults and other criminal-justice changes in D.C. ma…
- Local governmentsTerminating the D.C. Judicial Nomination Commission and restricting the D.C. Council's ability to change criminal sente…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
D.C. governance and criminal-justice changes: progressives emphasize threats to local home rule and youth justice outcomes; conservatives emphasize tougher public-safety measures.
This persona would view the resolution as broadly problematic because it fast-tracks a set of bills that include measures they see as rolling back D.C. home rule and expanding punitive criminal-justice measures for youth, while also advancing fossil-fuel friendly policies.
They would be cautiously supportive of any FERC interconnection reform that meaningfully accelerates clean energy deployment but would be skeptical until they can see the adopted Rules Committee texts.
They would see the procedural waivers and adoption of Rules Committee prints as limiting debate and amendment on matters with civil-rights and climate implications.
This persona would take a mixed, pragmatic view: they may favor some provisions that aim to improve energy permitting and grid interconnection while being wary of heavy-handed federal intervention in D.C. governance and of procedural limits on amendment.
They would appreciate efforts to streamline energy infrastructure approvals if accompanied by transparency and safeguards, but would want fiscal and legal clarity.
They would be uneasy about lowering juvenile criminal age to 14 and about terminating a D.C. judicial nomination body without clear justification.
This persona would generally view the resolution favorably because it expedites consideration of tougher criminal-justice measures in D.C., energy infrastructure facilitation, and limits on certain Federal Reserve activities including a CBDC-related restriction.
They would approve of quick floor action, adoption of Rules Committee substitutes, and constrained debate to prevent dilatory tactics.
They would see reestablishing the National Coal Council and streamlining cross-border energy facilities as pro-energy security and pro-jobs moves.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Based solely on content and structure, the resolution enables consideration of several controversial, high‑salience policy changes and bundles measures that would face divergent stakeholder opposition in later stages. While the rules posture can facilitate House consideration and possible passage of the individual bills there, the substantive provisions are likely to encounter strong resistance, substantial amendment, or blockage in the other chamber and at the executive‑branch review stage. The absence of clear compromise features and the federal intrusion into local governance further lower the prospects for final enactment without significant alteration.
- The resolution itself governs House floor procedure; whether the individual underlying bills would be adopted by the House is uncertain and would affect downstream prospects.
- No cost estimates or Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scoring is included in the resolution text; fiscal impacts of criminal justice changes and energy regulatory reforms are therefore unclear.
Recent votes on the bill.
The House formally adopted this resolution. A resolution applies only to the House and does not require the other chamber's approval or the President's signature — this vote settles the matter.
What is a approve resolution?Hide explanation
A resolution is a formal statement of opinion or decision by the chamber.
Debate was cut short. The House will proceed directly to a vote on the underlying question.
What is a end debate now?Hide explanation
In the House, this ends debate and forces an immediate vote on the main question.
Go deeper than the headline read.
D.C. governance and criminal-justice changes: progressives emphasize threats to local home rule and youth justice outcomes; conservatives e…
Based solely on content and structure, the resolution enables consideration of several controversial, high‑salience policy changes and bund…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this resolution is a clear and detailed procedural/agenda-setting instrument. It precisely identifies the bills to be considered, adopts specific committee prints as substitute…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.