Passed
HRES-1275-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by H. Griffith (R-VA)
What it does
This resolution is a procedural "rule" passed by the House Rules Committee that sets the terms for floor debate on five separate pieces of legislation: (1) H.R. 5625, directing the Attorney General to publish a list of jurisdictions that permit cashless bail; (2) H.R. 6260, prohibiting fraud in connection with posting bail; (3) H.R. 8365, placing conditions on court-appointed monitors; (4) H. Con. Res. 96, a concurrent resolution expressing support for law enforcement officers; and (5) H.R. 8469, a military construction and Department of Veterans Affairs appropriations bill for fiscal year 2027. The resolution would govern how much time is allotted for debate, what amendments may be offered, and the procedural path each bill follows to a floor vote.
Who benefits
Members of the House majority who want to control the amendment process and floor schedule for these five bills. Supporters of the underlying legislation — including those who favor bail transparency requirements, anti-bail-fraud measures, limits on court monitors, expressions of support for law enforcement, and military construction and veterans' funding — benefit from having a structured path to a floor vote. Veterans' service organizations and military construction contractors benefit indirectly if H.R. 8469 advances.
Who is hurt
Members of the House minority who may be blocked from offering amendments under the rule's terms. Legislators who oppose any of the five underlying bills lose procedural leverage if the rule restricts debate time or limits amendments. Advocacy groups opposed to the underlying legislation lose an opportunity to slow or modify the bills through the amendment process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that structured rules are a necessary and routine tool for managing House floor time efficiently, preventing dilatory tactics, and ensuring that legislation with committee support receives an orderly vote. They contend that all five underlying bills address distinct policy needs — from bail system transparency to veterans' funding — and that a consolidated rule is a standard mechanism for advancing a legislative agenda in an orderly, time-limited session.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that restrictive rules limit the minority's ability to offer amendments and shape legislation, reducing democratic deliberation on the floor. They contend that bundling five substantively different bills — ranging from criminal justice policy to appropriations — into a single procedural vehicle obscures individual accountability and may prevent members from registering targeted objections to specific provisions without voting against the entire package.
Passed
Passed