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Bill

Bill

HRES 906

Amending the Rules of the House of Representatives to require a supermajority vote of Members present and voting to subject a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner to the censure or disapproval of the House, or removal from committee membership.

119th Congress Introduced by Don Bacon and 30 co-sponsors

Bill raises House disciplinary vote threshold from simple to supermajority for censure, disapproval, and committee removal, making member discipline harder to impose.

Submitted in House
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HRES 906

Legislative bill overview

H.RES 906 proposes to amend House rules to require a supermajority vote (rather than a simple majority) for three disciplinary actions: censuring a Member, issuing disapproval of a Member, or removing a Member from committee assignments. Currently, these actions require only a simple majority of those present and voting.

Why is this important

This rule change directly affects the House's ability to discipline its own members—a core institutional power. By raising the threshold from 50% to a supermajority (typically 67%), the bill makes it substantially harder to take action against Members, which proponents argue protects minority party interests and individual Members, while critics argue it weakens institutional accountability mechanisms.

Potential points of contention

  • Partisan protection vs. accountability: The supermajority requirement could shield Members from consequences for misconduct if their party provides 1/3-plus opposition, potentially enabling problematic behavior to go unaddressed.
  • Bipartisan sponsorship masks deeper disagreement: While the bill spans both parties, underlying disagreement exists about whether discipline should require broad consensus or reflect majority will, particularly regarding committee removals (which have been used more aggressively in recent years).
  • Scope of "disapproval": The term "disapproval of the House" is vague and could encompass various condemnatory actions, making the practical impact unclear without further definition.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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