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Bill

HR 832

CONDEMNS-CTU-CIVIC ACTION DAY

104th Regular Session Introduced by Marty McLaughlin

The bill states that the Illinois House condemns CTU-Civic Action Day, serving as a non-binding symbolic resolution with no new laws or obligations.

Referred to Rules Committee
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Bill Summary · HR 832

Summary of HR 832 (104th Congress, Illinois) – “CONDEMNS-CTU-CIVIC ACTION DAY”

Purpose and intent

  • The bill expresses condemnation of a particular event or action referred to as the “CTU-Civic Action Day.”
  • It appears to be a non-binding resolution aimed at signaling the legislature’s stance on the cited civic action day rather than enacting new law or creating enforceable obligations.

Key provisions and changes

  • Declares that the Illinois House of Representatives condemns the activities or organizers associated with CTU-Civic Action Day.
  • Contains no text proposing funding, statutory changes, or regulatory authority beyond formal condemnation.
  • As a resolution, it would not directly create rights, duties, or penalties; it serves as an official statement of opinion from the chamber.

Who or what would be affected

  • The primary impact is on political positioning and public messaging. It affects:
    • The Illinois General Assembly’s stance on CTU-Civic Action Day.
    • Public perception and communications from the House in relation to CTU-Civic Action Day.
  • No direct regulatory, tax, or programmatic changes are indicated.
  • Citizens, organizations, or groups planning or participating in CTU-Civic Action Day would not acquire new rights or obligations under this bill.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • The bill is a concurrent or simple resolution typical of a formal condemnation; it would follow standard legislative procedures for passing a resolution in the Illinois House (and potentially the Senate, if a companion measure exists).
  • As a non-binding resolution, it would not require appropriation authority or enactment into law.
  • No specific dates, funding, or compliance deadlines are indicated beyond the session context (104th Congress, Illinois).

Notes

  • The bill lists Marty McLaughlin as a co-sponsor.
  • The available information treats HR 832 as a symbolic legislative expression rather than substantive policy legislation.

If you have access to the full text, I can extract exact language and confirm any additional procedural steps or companion measures.

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

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