HRES-312-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Bryan Steil (R-WI)
What it does
H. Res. 312 would formally dismiss an election contest filed on January 9, 2025, challenging the results of the election for the U.S. House seat representing Florida's 14th Congressional District. The House would dismiss the contest on the procedural ground that it was not filed within the time limit required by the Federal Contested Elections Act. The resolution does not address the underlying merits of the contest.
Who benefits
The sitting Representative from Florida's 14th Congressional District, whose seat is secured by the dismissal. The House as an institution, which avoids a potentially lengthy and resource-intensive contested election proceeding. Florida voters in the 14th District who retain their currently seated representative without disruption.
Who is hurt
The contestant who filed the election challenge on January 9, 2025, whose claims would be dismissed without a hearing on the merits. Voters in Florida's 14th District who may have preferred the challenger, and who would not receive a substantive review of the contest's underlying allegations. Advocates for electoral accountability who argue procedural dismissals can shield disputed outcomes from scrutiny.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Federal Contested Elections Act establishes clear, mandatory filing deadlines that exist to ensure timely resolution of election disputes and prevent prolonged uncertainty in congressional representation. They contend that enforcing the deadline is a straightforward application of House rules — the contest was filed outside the statutory window, and allowing untimely filings to proceed would undermine the integrity and predictability of the election contest process itself.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that dismissing the contest on procedural grounds alone prevents any examination of the underlying electoral allegations, which may involve serious questions about the validity of the election results. They contend that if the deadline was missed due to circumstances beyond the contestant's control, a strict procedural dismissal prioritizes technicality over the fundamental democratic interest in ensuring that the correct candidate is seated in Congress.