The Congressional Floor Summary is a (mostly) daily briefing on U.S. House and Senate floor activity — bills scheduled, votes taken, nominations pending, and the legislative horizon ahead — produced by Lens and Mix, LLC using AI-assisted research, updated on days Congress is in session.
This is an experimental, strictly non-partisan publication. It reports legislative activity across both parties as a factual record, without commentary or advocacy. Because it is AI-assisted, it may contain errors and should not be treated as an official or definitive legislative record — always verify critical details against official sources such as Congress.gov, the Senate Daily Digest, and the House Majority Leader's schedule.
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House: War Powers passed 215–208 · Massie+Fitzpatrick+Barrett+Davidson R crossovers · Goes to Senate
Senate: War Powers procedural vote 50–47 · Cassidy flipped after primary loss · Final vote not yet scheduled · Need 1 more R
FISA expires June 12 · 7 days · No deal · 4th extension likely · Trump in "final negotiations" with Iran
Trump: "4 bad Republicans" on War Powers · "Final negotiations to end the War" · Iran deal active
In session
Urgent / deadline
Context / note
End-of-week recap — week of June 1: A historic and consequential week. The House passed an Iran War Powers resolution 215–208 — the first final passage in either chamber. Four Republicans crossed over: Massie, Fitzpatrick, Barrett, and Davidson. In the Senate, the war powers picture is equally dramatic: Cassidy flipped to yes after Trump helped defeat him in the Louisiana primary, giving Democrats their 4th Republican crossover (50–47 procedural vote). One more Senate Republican vote means the resolution passes both chambers. Trump called the House vote "a meaningless vote" and referenced "final negotiations to end the War" — active Iran deal talks are underway. FISA has 7 days to expiration with no deal in sight; a 4th short-term extension is essentially certain. The week ends with Congress set to return after this weekend for what will be among the most consequential final days before the June 12 FISA cliff.
🔄 Week of June 1 — complete picture:
- House War Powers resolution H.Con.Res. 86 — confirmed exact vote: 215–208: Republican crossovers were Massie (KY), Fitzpatrick (PA), Barrett (MI), and Davidson (OH). Rep. Jared Golden (D-ME), the only Democrat who previously voted against similar measures, voted yes. The resolution had originally been scheduled two weeks ago — Republican leaders sent members home early for the May recess specifically because it appeared to have enough Republican votes for passage. Trump: "Yesterday, in a meaningless vote, the House voted, 4 bad Republicans and all of the Dumocrats, to limit my War Powers, right in the middle of my final negotiations to end the War with the Islamic Republic of Iran."
- Senate War Powers — Cassidy flips, 50–47 procedural vote (May 19 confirmed): The Senate advanced its war powers resolution 50–47 with four Republicans crossing over: Collins, Murkowski, Paul, and Cassidy (fresh off his primary loss to Trump's endorsed opponent). Fetterman was the only Democrat to vote no. The vote was a motion to discharge — procedural, not final. Final vote not yet scheduled. Kaine: "If everybody's here, we need one more vote." Three absent Republicans (Cornyn, Tillis, Tuberville) would likely vote no if present — which would produce a 50–50 tie that fails.
- Iran deal — Trump in "final negotiations": Trump's social media post referenced "final negotiations to end the War with the Islamic Republic of Iran" — the first explicit presidential acknowledgment of active peace talks. CNN reported June 1: "US and Iran exchange renewed fire as Trump asks for changes to proposed deal to end hostilities." Iran has offered to reopen the Strait of Hormuz; terms are being negotiated. A deal would dramatically change the political landscape — and potentially render both the War Powers votes and the FISA intelligence concerns moot.
- FISA — 7 days, no deal, 4th extension near-certain: No deal framework has been announced. With the effective deadline approximately June 9, another short-term extension — the 4th — is now almost certainly how this resolves. Thune has essentially signaled as much. The extension will pass hours before the midnight June 12 deadline, as the prior three have.
- Reconciliation — correction on sequence: Clarification from week's sources: the Senate's 53–46 procedural vote (motion to proceed) was Wednesday June 3, kicking off the vote-a-rama. The 51–50 final passage with Vance tie-break came after — likely Thursday June 4 or early this morning. Collins, Tillis, and Paul voted no on final passage.
The Supreme Court's 6–3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais (April 30) effectively guts Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which had required states to draw majority-minority districts to protect minority voter representation. Justice Alito's majority held that race-based district drawing is constitutionally impermissible absent the narrowest justification. Florida immediately enacted a new gerrymander; Mississippi and Alabama called special sessions. Estimates suggest up to 19 additional Republican-favoring House seats could be drawn by 2028. The Purcell doctrine limits most states from making changes before November 2026 — but Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi are moving now. Congressional Democrats have no legislative path to pass a new VRA or fix. The ruling will dominate redistricting politics through the 2030 census.
Louisiana Gov. attempting to delay May 16 primary — legal challenges expected. FL already enacted. AL/TN in special sessions. Up to 19 House seats could shift R by 2028.
Extended as P.L. 119-86 through June 12 — 45-day clean extension signed Thursday. The 3-year deal (S.1318 with CBDC ban) remains unresolved. Senate cannot pass the CBDC permanent ban (needs 60 votes). House conservatives may not accept S.1318 without CBDC. Key question heading into recess: can Thune and Johnson find a compromise that satisfies both chambers? Wyden/Lee bipartisan warrant-requirement alternative still being discussed. New effective negotiating deadline: ~June 12 (72-hour posting rule). Congress returns May 11 with 35 days to spare. House passed S.1318 (3-year) 235–191 Wednesday — but CBDC ban attached is dead on arrival in Senate (needs 60 votes). Thune is likely sending back a clean 45-day extension, which the House can accept under the suspension provision in Wednesday's rule. If a 45-day extension passes both chambers today, new deadline: ~June 15. The 3-year deal negotiations resume after recess with the CBDC question still unresolved. If nothing passes tonight: FISA lapses for the first time in its history.
25 days to June 12. Effective deal deadline ~June 9. Intelligence officials warning lapse would hurt Project Freedom operations. CBDC divide remains central obstacle.
White House declared hostilities "terminated" May 1, but the U.S. naval blockade continues and U.S. forces attacked an Iranian-flagged tanker this week attempting to breach the blockade. Iran revealed peace demands Trump rejected and stalled nuclear talks. Macron calling for Strait reopening. 7th War Powers vote expected this week. Wicker public hearing on Operation Epic Fury expected this week. 13 U.S. service members killed. Gas above $4/gallon nationally. The 60-day War Powers clock that began March 2 expires today. Tuesday's 6th Senate vote reportedly failed 52–48 — the narrowest margin yet. Iran has offered to reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for the U.S. lifting its naval blockade. Navy Secretary Phelan announced he is leaving the administration. Trump's options: (1) invoke the 30-day withdrawal notification unilaterally — buying until May 31; (2) seek a formal AUMF (no sign of that); (3) argue ceasefire days don't count toward the 60. Democrats have more resolutions queued. Collins, Murkowski, Tillis, Curtis still pressing for a congressional vote. If Trump simply ignores the deadline without invoking the 30-day notice, a constitutional confrontation is possible.
House passed 215–208 (Massie+Fitzpatrick+Barrett+Davidson). Senate advanced 50–47 procedural (Cassidy+Collins+Murkowski+Paul) but no final vote yet. Kaine: "Need 1 more R." Iran deal "final negotiations" may moot vote. If Senate passes → Trump veto → override attempt.
DHS shutdown ENDED after 76 days — P.L. 119-85 signed April 30. The $10B rainy day emergency fund is depleted by end of this week — 270,000 workers including Secret Service agents face missed paychecks. The WHCD shooting has put the Secret Service funding crisis in stark relief. Non-ICE/CBP agencies funded through Sept. 30. ICE/CBP on reconciliation track — Bacon and swing-district Republicans pressing Johnson; and reconciliation for ICE/CBP (still needs House to adopt S.Con.Res. 33). Johnson has still not brought the Senate bill to the floor. Rep. Roy wants the reconciliation bill to include a "secure ballroom on White House grounds" and other non-DHS items.
Shutdown ended Apr 30. ICE/CBP reconciliation bill due May 15. Final bill → June 1 target.
Senate adopted S.Con.Res. 33 50–48 April 23. House Rules Committee had the resolution in its package Monday night but adjourned without acting. Rules reconvening today. House Budget Chair Arrington pushing to expand scope. Conservative Rep. Roy wants to add "secure ballroom on White House grounds," SAVE Act, transgender/abortion funding restrictions, and a third reconciliation bill. If House amends the resolution, it returns to Senate for another vote-a-rama. Committees have until May 15 to draft the actual bill once resolution is adopted. Trump's June 1 target is slipping.
House Rules must act this week. Expansion demands vs. tight timeline. June 1 target now in doubt.
U.S. military operations against Iran are approaching the 60-day War Powers Act threshold. Some Republicans (Hawley, Tillis) are calling for a formal AUMF. Democrats are pushing for a vote to define the scope of operations. Pentagon has signaled a supplemental funding request is coming — potentially $200B+. No formal AUMF introduced yet.
Politically explosive; bipartisan discomfort growing as conflict extends.
The new fiscal year begins October 1, 2026. Budget hearings are underway this week (OMB Director Vought testifying April 16). The Administration is requesting $1.15 trillion in base defense spending plus $350B in supplemental defense reconciliation. The FY2026 shutdown history makes timely FY2027 passage a long shot — another continuing resolution or shutdown is a realistic possibility.
Fiscal year deadline: October 1, 2026.
The House passed H.R. 1 (the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act") in May 2025 by 215–214. It encompasses tax cuts (~$4.5T over 10 years extending TCJA provisions), Medicaid work requirements, SNAP changes, border security funding, and a $4T debt limit increase. The Senate is now working through it under reconciliation rules with extensive amendment debates. Trump demanded passage by June 1.
Senate passage on a razor-thin timeline; internal GOP divisions over Medicaid cuts remain.
H.R. 1 includes a $4 trillion debt limit increase (from $36.1T to $40.1T). If the bill passes, this buys runway through roughly late 2026 or early 2027. If it stalls, the debt ceiling becomes a separate crisis point — Treasury has been using extraordinary measures since early 2025. CBO projects the current ceiling could be reached as early as fall 2026.
Deadline contingent on H.R. 1 passage; independent crisis possible if reconciliation stalls.
Senate Democrats are filibustering this House-passed voter ID bill. Republicans lack 60 votes for cloture and Majority Leader Thune has declined to change Senate rules. The bill is effectively stalled but Republicans are continuing floor debate for political messaging ahead of the 2026 midterms. Passage considered highly unlikely without a rules change.
More a campaign issue than a legislative one at this point.
The 119th Congress ends January 3, 2027. All bills not enacted by that date expire. The November 2026 midterms will determine the composition of the 120th Congress. Republicans currently hold a narrow House majority (218–214) and a 53–47 Senate majority. Any bills not passed before election-year recess schedules shrink the legislative calendar significantly.
Effective legislative window closes by ~September 2026 as campaign season dominates.