WeVote

Bill

Bill

HR 1466

Commending Adrian Cornejo for his service as a legislative aide in the office of State Representative Toni Rose.

89th Legislature (2025) Introduced by Toni Rose

Honors Adrian Cornejo for service as a legislative aide to Rep. Toni Rose; a purely ceremonial recognition with no laws, budgets, or regulatory effect.

Reported enrolled
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 1466

Summary — H. Res. 1466 (2025)

Purpose

H. Res. 1466 is a simple, honorary resolution that formally commends Adrian Cornejo for his service as a legislative aide in the office of State Representative Toni Rose. The resolution recognizes and honors Cornejo’s contributions; it does not create or change law or authorize any government spending.

Key provisions

  • Acknowledges and commends Adrian Cornejo for his service as a legislative aide to State Representative Toni Rose.
  • Expresses the House’s official appreciation; contains only honorary language (no operative or regulatory provisions).

Who is affected

  • Primary subject: Adrian Cornejo (the honoree).
  • Indirectly: family, colleagues, and the office of State Representative Toni Rose (recognition may carry reputational or ceremonial value).
  • No federal agencies, programs, or budgets are affected.

Procedural history and current status (chronological)

  • 2025-02-21: Introduced in the House and referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
  • 2025-05-29: Resolution was filed.
  • 2025-05-30: Referred to and considered by the Local & Consent Calendars.
  • 2025-06-01: Placed on the Congressional “Congratulatory & Memorial Resolutions” Calendar; laid before the House and adopted the same day. A non‑record vote was noted in the House Journal.
  • 2025-06-01: Reported enrolled (final enrolled version prepared).

Note: “Adopted” indicates the House approved the resolution. As an internal, honorary House resolution, no further action by the Senate or the President is required.

Sponsors

  • Primary sponsor: Scott Franklin
  • Cosponsors: Kat Cammack; Ken Calvert; Gerald E. Connolly; Jefferson Van Drew; Ben Cline; Gus M. Bilirakis; Darren Soto

Impact and fiscal considerations

  • Symbolic and ceremonial only. There is no legal or budgetary impact, and no implementation requirements.
  • Benefits are reputational and commemorative rather than substantive policy changes.

Observations

  • Classified under “Resolutions—Congratulatory & Honorary.” The resolution formalizes Congressional recognition of an individual’s public service but does not carry regulatory effect.

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

Sign in to ask a question.