HRES-991-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Nick LaLota (R-NY)
What it does
H. Res. 991 would direct the Clerk of the House of Representatives to formally request that the Senate return H.R. 1834 — a bill titled "To advance policy priorities that will break the gridlock" — to the House. This is a procedural resolution that does not change any law, create any program, or appropriate any funds. It is a standard inter-chamber communication mechanism used when the House wishes to recall a bill it has already sent to the Senate.
Who benefits
The House of Representatives as an institution benefits by regaining control over H.R. 1834 and the ability to amend, hold, or otherwise act on it. House members who wish to modify or reconsider the bill's contents would benefit. Indirectly, any groups affected by H.R. 1834's underlying policy provisions could be affected depending on what the House does with the bill after its return — but this resolution itself produces no direct policy benefit for any outside group.
Who is hurt
The Senate loses custody of H.R. 1834 and the ability to act on it independently. Senators or outside groups who preferred the Senate to act on the bill as transmitted would be negatively affected. Any stakeholders who supported the bill's underlying policy provisions and wanted Senate action may face delay or uncertainty.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the House has a legitimate institutional interest in recalling legislation it passed in order to revisit, refine, or redirect it — a routine exercise of the chamber's constitutional authority over its own legislative business. They contend that recalling H.R. 1834 allows the House to ensure the bill reflects current priorities before the Senate acts, preserving the integrity of the bicameral process.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that once the House has passed and transmitted a bill to the Senate, recalling it interrupts the normal legislative process and may signal internal disagreement or instability in the House's position. They contend that pulling the bill back creates delay and uncertainty for any stakeholders or policy areas that H.R. 1834's underlying provisions were intended to address.