HRES-590-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Virginia Foxx (R-NC)
What it does
H. Res. 590 is a procedural House resolution that would deem the House to have automatically accepted the Senate's amendment to H.R. 4 — a bill to cancel certain previously approved federal spending, as proposed by the President on June 3, 2025, under the Impoundment Control Act of 1974. Rather than holding a separate vote on the Senate amendment, the resolution treats adoption of the resolution itself as simultaneous concurrence with the Senate's changes. This is a standard legislative procedure known as a "self-executing rule."
Who benefits
The House majority leadership, which avoids a separate, potentially contentious floor vote on the Senate amendment's specific contents. Members who support the underlying spending rescissions in H.R. 4 benefit by streamlining passage. Fiscal conservatives who favor reducing federal expenditures benefit if the rescissions in H.R. 4 are enacted. Taxpayers who prefer reduced federal spending may benefit indirectly, depending on which budget authority is rescinded.
Who is hurt
Members of Congress — particularly in the minority — who would prefer a separate, recorded vote specifically on the Senate amendment's contents, as the self-executing rule reduces a distinct vote opportunity. Recipients of any federal programs whose funding is rescinded under H.R. 4 may be negatively affected, though the specific programs depend on the content of the President's June 3, 2025 rescission messages. Federal agencies administering rescinded budget authority would also be affected.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that self-executing rules are a well-established, routine tool used by both parties to efficiently move legislation through the House, particularly when the Senate and House have already agreed on the substance of a bill. They contend that H. Res. 590 simply avoids redundant procedural steps, allowing Congress to fulfill its constitutional obligation to act on presidential rescission requests within the 45-day window required by the Impoundment Control Act of 1974.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that self-executing rules obscure accountability by allowing members to avoid a direct, recorded vote on the specific changes the Senate made to H.R. 4, reducing transparency for constituents. They contend that when a bill involves canceling already-appropriated federal spending — a significant exercise of congressional power — each chamber should vote explicitly on the final text, rather than using a procedural shortcut that bundles concurrence into a single rule adoption vote.