HRES-1345-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Nicholas Langworthy (R-NY)
What it does
This is a procedural "rule" resolution — a standard House floor management tool. It would set the terms under which the House considers four separate measures: (1) H.R. 8312, which would create fraud prevention and data-sharing functions at the Treasury Department and establish a permanent government-wide Inspector General for Fraud, Accountability, and Recovery; (2) H.R. 8464, which would authorize the Treasury to pause or segment federal payments; (3) H. Res. 1335, a non-binding resolution condemning government fraud and expressing support for pre-payment eligibility verification; and (4) S. 2, a major budget reconciliation bill. The rule would govern the time, amendments, and procedures allowed for debating each of these measures on the House floor.
Who benefits
Members of the House majority party, who use rules resolutions to control the floor schedule and limit amendments from the minority. Proponents of the four underlying bills, who benefit from a structured path to a floor vote. Taxpayers broadly, to the extent the underlying fraud-prevention measures reduce improper payments. Federal program administrators who would gain clearer legal authority for payment controls.
Who is hurt
House minority party members, who may have fewer opportunities to offer amendments under a structured or closed rule. Beneficiaries of federal programs whose payments could be paused or segmented under H.R. 8464, if that bill advances. Advocacy groups opposed to any of the four underlying measures, who lose procedural leverage once a rule is adopted. Opponents of the reconciliation bill (S. 2), who would have limited ability to slow or amend it once the rule is in place.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that this rule provides an orderly, efficient path to consider a package of measures aimed at reducing the estimated $175–$236 billion in improper federal payments made annually, according to the Government Accountability Office. They contend that bundling fraud prevention infrastructure (H.R. 8312), payment controls (H.R. 8464), and a reconciliation vehicle (S. 2) under a single rule reflects standard legislative practice and allows the House to act on fiscally significant reforms without procedural delay.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that packaging a sweeping budget reconciliation bill (S. 2) alongside narrower fraud-prevention measures under a single rule limits meaningful debate and amendment opportunities on legislation that could affect tens of millions of Americans. They contend that structured or closed rules — which restrict minority amendments — undermine the deliberative function of the House and allow major fiscal changes to advance without adequate scrutiny, a concern amplified when the underlying reconciliation bill carries large-scale spending or revenue implications.