Electing a Member to a certain standing committee of the House of Representatives.
- Bill Number
- H.Res. 107
- Origin Chamber
- House
- Congress
- 119th Congress, Session 1
- Policy Area
- Congress
- Status
- Passed House
- Latest Action
- 2025-02-05: Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
- Last Updated
- 2025-04-21T14:01:07Z
AI-Generated Summary
Purpose
This House Resolution (H. Res. 107) aims to assign a specific member of the House of Representatives to a standing committee, updating the committee's membership and ranking structure.
Key Provisions
- Elects Mr. Moylan to the Committee on Education and Workforce.
- Specifies that Mr. Moylan will rank immediately after Mr. Rulli on the committee.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- This resolution does not amend or alter any existing statutes or laws; it is an internal procedural action of the House of Representatives.
- It modifies the composition and ranking of a congressional committee, which is a routine housekeeping matter under House rules.
Potential Impacts
- On Government Agencies: None directly; it may indirectly influence legislative oversight or hearings related to education and workforce issues handled by the committee.
- On Citizens: Minimal direct impact, though it could affect how education and labor policies are reviewed and debated in Congress.
- On International Relations: No impact, as this is a domestic procedural resolution.
Main Stakeholders
- Mr. Moylan: The primary beneficiary, gaining a seat on the committee with a defined ranking.
- Committee on Education and Workforce Members: Including Mr. Rulli, as the addition may shift internal dynamics, workload, or subcommittee assignments.
- House of Representatives Leadership: Involved in committee assignments to ensure balanced representation on policy-focused committees.
Notable Legal, Constitutional, or Political Implications
- Legal/Constitutional: This is a simple resolution under Article I of the U.S. Constitution, which grants Congress authority to determine its internal rules and committee structures. It has no binding legal effect outside the House and requires no presidential approval.
- Political: Reinforces party or leadership control over committee assignments, potentially influencing the direction of education and workforce legislation in the 119th Congress. Such resolutions are common and rarely controversial unless tied to broader partisan disputes.
This summary was generated by AI and may contain inaccuracies. Refer to the official source document for the authoritative text.
Sponsor
Rep. Griffith, H. Morgan [R-VA-9]
Recent Actions
- 2025-02-05: Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
- 2025-02-05: On agreeing to the resolution Agreed to without objection. (text: CR H469)
- 2025-02-05: Passed/agreed to in House: On agreeing to the resolution Agreed to without objection. (text: CR H469)
- 2025-02-05: Considered as privileged matter. (consideration: CR H469)
- 2025-02-05: Submitted in House
Bill Versions
- H. RES. 107 (EH) - Engrossed in House — issued 2025-02-05 — PDF (1 pages)