Senate amendment to H. Con. Res. 14 - Establishing the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2025 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034.
Senate amendment to H. Con. Res. 14 - Establishing the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2025 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034.
Hearing Information
Meeting Information
Wednesday, April 9, 2025 - 8:45am H-313, The Capitol View Announcement »
Video
Rules Committee Hearing on Senate Amendment to H. Con. Res. 14 [EMERGENCY MEETING]
Bill Text
Text of the Senate Amendment to H. Con. Res. 14PDFXML
(as engrossed by the Senate)
Hearing Documents
Rule PDF
H. Rept. 119-56PDF
Rule Information
COMMITTEE ACTION:
REPORTED BY A RECORD VOTE of 9-3 on Wednesday, April 9, 2025.
FLOOR ACTION ON H. RES. 313:
Agreed to by a record vote of 216-215, after agreeing to the previous question by a record vote of 217-212, on Wednesday, April 9, 2025.
MANAGERS: Foxx/McGovern
1. Provides for consideration of the Senate amendment to H. Con. Res. 14.
2. Makes in order a motion offered by the chair of the Committee on the Budget or his designee that the House concur in the Senate amendment to H. Con. Res. 14.
3. Waives all points of order against consideration of the motion.
4. Provides that the Senate amendment and the motion shall be considered as read.
5. Provides one hour of general debate on the motion equally divided and controlled by the chair and ranking minority member of the Committee on the Budget or their respective designees.
6. Provides that each day during the period from April 9, 2025, through September 30, 2025, shall not constitute a calendar day for purposes of section 202 of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622) with respect to a joint resolution terminating a national emergency declared by the President on April 2, 2025.
Amendments (click each header to sort table ▲▼ by that column)
# | Version # | Sponsor(s) | Party | Summary | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Version 1 | Balint (VT) | Democrat | Strikes reconciliation instructions to House Committees on Energy and Commerce and Ways and Means to eliminate the cuts to health care insurance assistance for American families. | Submitted |
2 | Version 1 | Kaptur (OH) | Democrat | Strikes reconciliation instructions to the Energy and Commerce Committee, the Ways and Means Committee, and the Natural Resources Committee with jurisdiction over policies and programs regarding clean energy and energy costs. | Submitted |
3 | Version 1 | Balint (VT), Leger Fernández (NM) | Democrat | Creates a new point of order in the House of Representatives against legislation that cuts Social Security benefits, increases the early or full retirement age, or privatizes Social Security. | Submitted |
4 | Version 1 | Omar (MN) | Democrat | Strikes the reconciliation instructions for the Committee on Agriculture to protect food assistance programs from devastating cuts, including safeguarding benefit amounts to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and cost-of-living updates to the Thrifty Food Plan (TFP) which millions of families and farmers rely on. | Submitted |
5 | Version 1 | Omar (MN) | Democrat | Increases federal revenues by $1.349 trillion from Fiscal Year 2025 through Fiscal Year 2034. | Submitted |
6 | Version 1 | McGarvey (KY) | Democrat | Provides that allocations can be revised to increase compensation to Black Lung Program beneficiaries and improve the solvency of the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund without reducing benefits. | Submitted |
7 | Version 1 | McGarvey (KY) | Democrat | Strikes instructions that allow cuts to Medicaid, CHIP, Affordable Care Act subsidies, and SNAP, which millions of veterans and their dependents rely on for healthcare and nutrition. | Submitted |
8 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Amo (RI) | Democrat | Affirms that Medicaid is a critical program that provides health care, nursing home care, and other life-saving services to 72 million Americans. The resolution supports protecting Medicaid and rejecting Republicans’ extreme Medicaid cuts to fund more tax breaks for the wealthy. | Submitted |
9 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Amo (RI) | Democrat | Strikes instructions to Committees on Education and Workforce, and Agriculture in order to protect the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, Community Eligibility Provision, School Breakfast Program, and National School Lunch Program. | Submitted |
10 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Chu (CA) | Democrat | Adds at the end of title IV findings on the impact of Social Security benefits and a policy on doing no harm to Social Security. | Submitted |
11 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Jayapal (WA) | Democrat | Prevents the reconciliation bill from cutting Medicaid benefits and creates a point of order against legislation that would cut Medicaid. | Submitted |
12 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA) | Democrat | Prevents tax cuts for people with a net worth over $1 billion. | Submitted |
13 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA) | Democrat | Prevents cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which helps 42 million people, primarily seniors, children, and people with disabilities, afford food, by striking reconciliation instructions to the House & Senate Committees on Agriculture. | Submitted |
14 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Panetta (CA) | Democrat | Prohibits the chair of the Budget Committee from using estimates for reconciliation under a current policy baseline. | Submitted |
15 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Peters (CA) | Democrat | Increases budget authority and outlays for Function 550 by $16 billion for Fiscal Years 2025 through 2031 to support the NIH. | Submitted |
16 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Peters (CA) | Democrat | Strikes the reserve fund related to a current tax policy baseline. | Submitted |
17 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Plaskett (VI) | Democrat | Strikes reconciliation instructions for the Committees on Ways and Means and Oversight and Government Reform in order to protect federal agencies, civil servants, and sensitive data from unelected billionaires. | Submitted |
18 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Scott (VA) | Democrat | Strikes instructions to the Committee on the Education and Workforce that would make it harder for students to access high quality education, jeopardize child nutrition programs, and threaten financial student aid. | Submitted |
19 | Version 1 | McGovern (MA), Watson Coleman (NJ) | Democrat | Strikes the instructions for the Committee on Energy & Commerce to reduce the deficit by not less than $880,000,000,000 for the period of Fiscal Years 2025 through 2034. | Submitted |
20 | Version 1 | Peters (CA) | Democrat | Strikes the section of the resolution on the current tax policy baseline. | Submitted |
21 | Version 1 | Peters (CA) | Democrat | Increases budget authority and outlays for for Function 550 to support the National Institutes of Health. | Submitted |
22 | Version 2 | Dexter (OR), Bonamici (OR) | Democrat | Revised Strikes the reconciliation instructions from the Energy and Commerce Committee to prevent cuts to Medicaid from being used to finance tax cuts for billionaires and big corporations. | Revised |
23 | Version 1 | Leger Fernández (NM) | Democrat | Protects Medicaid from funding cuts. | Submitted |
24 | Version 1 | Leger Fernández (NM) | Democrat | Ensures the GOP reconciliation bill does not hurt working families by lowering taxes for Elon Musk and Federal Officials in the top 1% | Submitted |
25 | Version 1 | Leger Fernández (NM) | Democrat | Ensures the GOP reconciliation bill does not increase the deficit. | Submitted |
26 | Version 1 | Leger Fernández (NM) | Democrat | Protects programs that benefit Native Americans from funding cuts | Submitted |
Committee Votes
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 54
Motion by Ms. Leger Fernández to strike section 2 of the rule, which prevents the House from voting on legislation to repeal President Trump’s reckless recent tariffs issued on April 2, 2025. Defeated: 3–8
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 55
Motion by Ms. Leger Fernández to add a new section to the rule stating that House Resolution 211 is amended by striking section 4. This amendment shall take effect as if included in the adoption of House Resolution 211. Defeated: 3–8
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 56
Motion by Ms. Scanlon to amend the rule to make in order amendment #11 to the Senate Amendment to H. Con. Res. 14, offered by Ranking Member McGovern because of the limited notice provided by the majority, but originally authored by Representative Jayapal of Washington, who is listed as a cosponsor, which prevents the reconciliation bill from cutting Medicaid benefits and creates a point of order against legislation that would cut Medicaid. Defeated: 3–9
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 57
Motion by Mr. McGovern to amend the rule to make in order amendment #13, offered by Ranking Member McGovern, which strikes the instructions for the House and Senate Agriculture Committees to reduce the deficit by not less than $230,000,000,000 and $1,000,000,000 respectively, for the period of Fiscal Years 2025 through 2034. Defeated: 3–9
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 58
Motion by Mr. McGovern to amend the rule to make in order amendment #12, offered by Ranking Member McGovern, to prevent tax cuts for people with a net worth of over $1,000,000,000. Defeated: 3–9
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 59
Motion by Ms. Leger Fernández to amend the rule to make in order amendment #3 to the Senate Amendment to H. Con. Res. 14, offered by Representative Balint, which creates a new point of order in the House of Representatives against legislation that cuts Social Security benefits, increases the early or full retirement age, or privatizes Social Security. Defeated: 3–9
Rules Committee Record Vote No. 60
Motion by Mrs. Houchin to report the rule. Adopted: 9–3