- Targeted stakeholdersRaises public awareness about voting rights and registration deadlines, which could increase voter registration and tur…
- Local governmentsPromotes civic education by recommending school and university curricula on voting history and procedures, potentially…
- Federal agenciesSupports legislative efforts to expand federal voting protections (e.g., uniform standards, restoration of post‑incarce…
Supporting the designation of September 2025 as "National Voting Rights Month".
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committees on House Administration, Science, Space, and Technology, Oversight and Government Reform, Financial S…
The resolution expresses the House of Representatives’ support for designating September 2025 as “National Voting Rights Month.” It recounts historical and contemporary barriers to voting, references the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Supreme Court’s Shelby County decision, and encourages passage of legislation such as the Freedom to Vote Act and the Democracy Restoration Act.
The resolution urges civic education about voting in schools, thanks the USPS for a commemorative John Lewis stamp, and invites Congress to fund public service announcements reminding people about registration and elections.
The resolution is a nonbinding expression of support and recommendation rather than a law that changes policy.
Because this is a simple, nonbinding House resolution (intended to express support and encourage actions rather than create binding law), it does not need to become 'law' in the normal sense; adoption in the House is plausible but not guaranteed due to partisan controversy, while any broader statutory goals it endorses (e.g., the Freedom to Vote Act, Democracy Restoration Act) are materially harder to enact. Judged solely on content, the resolution itself faces modest barriers to House adoption but low probability of producing immediate binding federal action.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a well-structured commemorative resolution: it states a clear purpose, grounds that purpose in historical and legal context, and issues nonbinding encouragements appropriate to the form. It does not create rights, obligations, or funding mandates and therefore omits operational, fiscal, and accountability detail.
Endorsement of federal legislation (Freedom to Vote Act, Democracy Restoration Act): liberals strongly favor, centrists cautious, conservatives oppose as federal overreach.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesAs a federal resolution encouraging national standards and specific legislation, critics may argue it pressures federal…
- TaxpayersThe call for Congress to pass specific laws and to allocate funding for PSAs could be criticized for implying use of ta…
- Local governmentsIf recommended federal standards (e.g., expanded vote‑by‑mail, same‑day registration) were enacted, states and local el…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Endorsement of federal legislation (Freedom to Vote Act, Democracy Restoration Act): liberals strongly favor, centrists cautious, conservatives oppose as federal overreach.
A mainstream liberal would view this resolution positively as a needed symbolic and political reaffirmation of the importance of protecting and expanding voting rights.
They would welcome its historical framing of voter suppression, its call to pass the Freedom to Vote Act and Democracy Restoration Act, and the emphasis on civic education and outreach.
They would likely see the month designation as a useful platform to mobilize voters and raise awareness, while pressing for follow-up, binding legislative action.
A mainstream centrist would generally support the nonbinding idea of a National Voting Rights Month and civic education but would be cautious about endorsing specific federal bills that significantly alter election administration.
They would welcome awareness campaigns and school curricula that are factual and nonpartisan, and might support restoring voting rights to formerly incarcerated people on principle while wanting careful implementation.
They would be attentive to federalism concerns, potential costs, and the need to craft legislation that balances access with integrity, and prefer measured, evidence-based reforms.
A mainstream conservative would likely view the resolution as partisan and potentially an effort to federally centralize election policy, particularly because it explicitly urges passage of the Freedom to Vote Act and legislation restoring voting rights after incarceration.
They may support noncontroversial elements like civic education and encouraging voting in principle, but object to perceived federal overreach, calls to revise the Voting Rights Act’s preclearance approach, and the implicit critique of recent state-level voting laws.
Because the resolution is symbolic, some conservatives may simply abstain from active opposition while criticizing its policy prescriptions.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Because this is a simple, nonbinding House resolution (intended to express support and encourage actions rather than create binding law), it does not need to become 'law' in the normal sense; adoption in the House is plausible but not guaranteed due to partisan controversy, while any broader statutory goals it endorses (e.g., the Freedom to Vote Act, Democracy Restoration Act) are materially harder to enact. Judged solely on content, the resolution itself faces modest barriers to House adoption but low probability of producing immediate binding federal action.
- Whether House leadership will schedule the resolution for a floor vote and whether procedural choices (suspension calendar vs. regular order) will affect the threshold for passage.
- How many members from the opposing viewpoint would oppose a symbolic resolution (many symbolic measures are contested on partisan grounds), which affects final House vote margins.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Endorsement of federal legislation (Freedom to Vote Act, Democracy Restoration Act): liberals strongly favor, centrists cautious, conservat…
Because this is a simple, nonbinding House resolution (intended to express support and encourage actions rather than create binding law), i…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a well-structured commemorative resolution: it states a clear purpose, grounds that purpose in historical and legal context, and issues nonbinding encouragements a…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.