Congressional Floor Summary

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.

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Congressional Floor Summary — June 10, 2026
119th Congress · 2nd Session
U.S. Congressional Floor Summary
Congressional Floor Summary
House & Senate · Daily Legislative Report
Curated and produced by Lens and Mix, LLC using AI-assisted research
Wednesday, June 10, 2026 Week of June 8 · Session Day 36
Curated and produced by Lens and Mix, LLC using AI-assisted research · Independent non-partisan summary · Not an official government publication · Sourced from House Majority Leader, Senate Daily Press, Congress.gov, GovTrack.us, and current news reporting · For informational purposes only — verify all legislative status at official sources before acting on this information.
Actions ⚡ House Live Floor ⚡ Senate Floor 📊 GovTrack
Republican sponsor Democrat sponsor Bipartisan
Reconciliation 2.0 PASSED House 214–212 · Headed to Trump's desk · Ends 115-day immigration standoff
FISA expires FRIDAY June 12 · 2 days · Pulte/DNI standoff continues · GOP won't hold more failed votes
Trump demands Thune FIRE parliamentarian over SAVE Act · Thune resisting · Calls it "concerning"
Jan. 6 officers sue Trump over anti-weaponization fund · Raúl Castro indicted for murder by DOJ
In session Urgent / deadline Context / note
Week context: The reconciliation saga ended Tuesday — the House passed the ICE/CBP funding bill 214–212, sending it to Trump's desk and closing a 115-day standoff over immigration policy. Republicans passed it without any restrictions on the $1.776 billion anti-weaponization fund, despite earlier vows to block it. Retiring Sen. Tillis blasted his colleagues in a lengthy email, warning the fund will hurt the GOP in November. Now attention is consumed by two converging fights: FISA expires Friday June 12 with the Pulte/DNI standoff unresolved, and Trump has escalated by demanding Thune fire the Senate parliamentarian over the SAVE Act — a demand Thune is resisting and has called "concerning." Senate GOP leaders say they won't keep holding failed FISA procedural votes. Meanwhile, Jan. 6 officers have sued Trump over the anti-weaponization fund, and the DOJ has indicted Raúl Castro for murder amid the earlier Cuba tensions.
🔄 What changed since June 9:
  • Reconciliation 2.0 PASSED House 214–212 — headed to Trump's desk: The House passed the ICE/CBP reconciliation bill Tuesday on a party-line 214–212 vote, funding the agencies for three years. It ends a 115-day immigration standoff and goes to Trump for signature. Republicans passed it without any legislative restrictions on the $1.776B anti-weaponization fund — after earlier vowing to block it — because the leadership-driven House process gave members virtually no opportunity to offer restricting amendments. The only cross-party vote: Independent Rep. Kevin Kiley (CA), a former Republican who usually sides with the GOP, voted with Republicans. Every Republican voted yes; every Democrat voted no.
  • Tillis blasts colleagues over anti-weaponization fund: Retiring Sen. Tillis (R-NC) sent a lengthy email slamming GOP colleagues for voting down his amendment to block the fund, arguing: "I believe we will look back" on this as a mistake that will hurt Republicans in the November midterms. Jan. 6 officers have now filed suit against Trump over the fund.
  • Trump demands Thune fire the Senate parliamentarian: Trump posted on Truth Social calling on Thune to "immediately fire" Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough over her rulings keeping the SAVE Act out of reconciliation — at least the second such demand in five weeks. Thune is resisting, noting that replacing or overruling her would set a precedent future Democratic majorities could exploit, and would cost votes from institutionalist Republicans (Collins, Murkowski, McConnell). Thune called Trump's targeting of the parliamentarian "concerning."
  • FISA/Pulte standoff hardens — 2 days to expiration: Senate GOP leaders have no intention of holding more failed procedural votes this week. Most Republicans privately fault Trump for the eleventh-hour Pulte announcement, which derailed what Punchbowl called a "glide path" to a bipartisan 3-year reauthorization. A Republican lawmaker said Trump can save FISA simply by canceling the Pulte appointment. Schumer: "If the goal is to make FISA harder to pass, appointing a political loyalist like Bill Pulte to lead the intelligence community is exactly how you do it."
  • Raúl Castro indicted for murder by DOJ: The Justice Department charged Raúl Castro with murder amid Trump's threats toward Cuba — connecting to the "rumored Cuba attack" raised in Rubio's testimony last week. AG Blanche announced the indictment.
🗓 Legislative Horizon
Major initiatives expected in the weeks ahead & remainder of the 119th Congress (ends Jan 3, 2027)
Now — 2026 midterms Supreme Court — VRA Section 2 Ruling · Louisiana v. Callais · 6–3
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.
This week FISA Sec. 702 Reauthorization
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.
Today Iran War Powers Act — May 1 Statutory Deadline · Operation Epic Fury
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.
Weeks ahead Reconciliation 2.0 — ICE & Border Patrol Funding
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.
Coming months Iran AUMF / Supplemental Defense Funding
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.
Coming months FY2027 Appropriations & Budget Process
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.
Coming months "One Big Beautiful Bill" — Senate Action
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.
Later in session Debt Ceiling
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.
Ongoing SAVE America Act (Voter ID)
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.
Fall 2026 2026 Midterm Elections — Session Deadline
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.
119th Congress · 2nd Session · Currently before Congress
On the Floor — Week of May 11, 2026
Reconciliation STALLED Thu · $1.8B anti-weaponization fund broke GOP · Senate in recess · Vote expected week of June 1 · June 1 deadline MISSED
2
Days to FISA June 12 deadline
214–212
House reconciliation passage
H
U.S. House of Representatives
Majority Leader: Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) · Speaker: Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA)
Reconciliation 2.0 — PASSED · to Trump
ICE/CBP Reconciliation Bill — Passed House 214–212 · Headed to Trump's Desk · 115-Day Standoff Ends ✓ Passed House 214–212 · Party-line · To Trump for signature · ~$70B ICE/CBP through 2029
R
Vote: 214–212 · Tuesday June 9 · Party-line · Only cross-party: Rep. Kiley (I-CA) voted with GOP Funds: ICE + Border Patrol for 3 years (through 2029) · ~$70B · Anti-weaponization fund NOT restricted Significance: Ends 115-day immigration standoff · Second multi-billion infusion to agencies in a year
The House passed the ICE/CBP reconciliation bill 214–212 Tuesday, sending it to Trump's desk and ending a 115-day standoff over immigration policy. Every Republican voted yes; every Democrat voted no. The only technical crossover was Independent Rep. Kevin Kiley (CA), a former Republican. The bill funds ICE and Border Patrol through the end of Trump's term without any legislative restrictions on the $1.776B anti-weaponization fund — House Republicans had virtually no opportunity to offer restricting amendments under the leadership-driven process. CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott had said the agency was struggling to correctly pay employees and fulfill contracts without the funds. Immigration advocates warn that funding outside normal appropriations means the usual guardrails — detention data reporting, treatment requirements — are absent.
Vote Result — House passage House · Tue June 9, 2026 ✓ Passed 214–212
Yea 214
All R + Kiley (I-CA, former R)
Nay 212
All D
Next: Goes to Trump's desk for signature. Funds ICE/CBP through 2029. Anti-weaponization fund survives unrestricted. Jan. 6 officers suing Trump over the fund.
FISA + Pulte — 2 days
FISA Section 702 — Pulte Standoff · Expires Friday · GOP Faults Trump for Eleventh-Hour Appointment ⚠ 2 days · Pulte must go to unlock deal · GOP won't hold more failed votes · Lapse risk real
R
Jeffries: No FISA renewal unless Pulte removed as acting DNI GOP private view: Most Republicans fault Trump for eleventh-hour Pulte announcement that derailed glide path Fix: A Republican lawmaker said Trump can save FISA simply by canceling Pulte appointment
FISA expires Friday and the Pulte standoff is unresolved. Senate GOP leaders have no intention of holding more failed procedural votes this week. Most Republicans privately fault Trump for the eleventh-hour Pulte announcement, which Punchbowl reported derailed what was otherwise a "glide path" to a bipartisan 3-year reauthorization (3-year CBDC ban + FBI barred from using 702 data to prosecute U.S. persons). The simplest fix: Trump cancels the Pulte appointment. Short of that, the only way to assuage Democrats would be naming a qualified permanent DNI nominee. Schumer: "If the goal is to make FISA harder to pass, appointing a political loyalist like Bill Pulte to lead the intelligence community is exactly how you do it." A lapse — the second since 1978 — is now a real possibility absent a Pulte resolution.
Anti-weaponization fund — fallout
Anti-Weaponization Fund Fallout — Jan. 6 Officers Sue Trump · Tillis Blasts GOP Colleagues $1.776B fund survives unrestricted · Jan. 6 officers sue · Tillis: midterm liability
R
Fund: $1.776B · DOJ compensation for those "wronged" by federal law enforcement · Survives in reconciliation Jan. 6 officers: Filed suit against Trump over the fund Tillis: "We will look back" — warns fund hurts GOP in November midterms
The $1.776B anti-weaponization fund survived in the final reconciliation bill without legislative restrictions, despite earlier GOP vows to block it. The fallout is immediate: Jan. 6 officers have filed suit against Trump over the fund, which could compensate those who attacked the Capitol. Retiring Sen. Tillis unleashed on GOP colleagues in a lengthy email for voting down his blocking amendment, warning it will be a midterm liability. The fund's survival — combined with the DOJ's compliance with a court order temporarily blocking it pending litigation — leaves its ultimate fate in the courts even as the funding authority now exists in law.
Reconciliation 3.0 — in the works
Reconciliation 3.0 — Defense, Iran War Funding, Health Care, Fraud Prevention · Pfluger Optimistic Third party-line bill · Pfluger leading · Summer/fall timeline
R
Contents sought: Defense spending · Iran military conflict funding · health care reform · fraud prevention Pfluger (R-TX): "We're going to keep our heads down, work hard, and I feel comfortable getting it done" CBDC + SAVE Act: Both potential candidates for the third bill
With reconciliation 2.0 done, House Republicans are turning to a third party-line bill. Conservatives hope to include defense spending, funding for the Iran military conflict, health care reform, fraud prevention, and other priorities. Rep. Pfluger (R-TX) is optimistic about the timeline despite skeptics. The CBDC ban (if not resolved through FISA) and possibly the SAVE Act (now that Trump wants the parliamentarian fired over it) are candidates. The third reconciliation bill is becoming the catch-all vehicle for the remaining GOP agenda heading into the fall and the November midterms.
S
U.S. Senate
Majority Leader: Sen. John Thune (R-SD) · Minority Leader: Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY)
Parliamentarian — Trump demands firing
Trump Demands Thune Fire Senate Parliamentarian Over SAVE Act · Thune Resisting ⚠ 2nd demand in 5 weeks · Thune: "concerning" · Institutional norms test · Collins/Murkowski/McConnell opposed
R
Trump: Calls on Thune to "immediately fire" Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough · Truth Social Issue: MacDonough ruled SAVE Act (proof-of-citizenship voting) can't pass via simple-majority reconciliation Thune: Resisting · Calls targeting "concerning" · Precedent would help future Democratic majorities
Trump escalated his fight over the SAVE Act Monday, calling on Thune to "immediately fire" Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough — at least the second such demand in five weeks. MacDonough ruled the SAVE Act (proof-of-citizenship to register, photo ID to vote) cannot pass through simple-majority reconciliation. Thune is resisting: replacing or overruling her would set a precedent future Democratic majorities could exploit, and would cost votes from institutionalist Republicans like Collins, Murkowski, and McConnell, who balked at waiving the Byrd Rule. Thune called Trump's targeting of the parliamentarian "concerning." The standoff exposes a long-running fault line between Trump's results-driven base and Senate institutionalists who insist the rules matter.
FISA + Pulte — 2 days
FISA Section 702 — Pulte Standoff Continues · No More Failed Votes · Expires Friday ⚠ 2 days · Thune livid with Democrats · Faults Trump privately · 60-vote threshold needs Warner
R
Thune: Livid with Democrats but nods to Pulte concerns · Won't hold more failed procedural votes Path to 60: Needs Warner to deliver Democratic votes · Warner is the key broker Rubio: Warned of "dire impacts" to national security if 702 goes dark · Last-ditch Thursday floor visit failed
With FISA expiring Friday, Thune is livid with Democrats but privately acknowledges their Pulte concerns. Senate GOP leaders won't hold more failed procedural votes this week. The path to 60 votes runs through Warner, who is seen by Republicans as the crucial broker who can deliver Democratic votes — but only if the Pulte issue is resolved. Rubio warned of "dire impacts" to national security if Section 702 goes dark, and made a last-ditch floor visit Thursday night that failed to prevent the failed procedural vote. Even if a path to 60 votes opens, Thune needs a time agreement to pass anything before Friday's deadline. A 4th short-term extension or a lapse are the live scenarios — both now hinging on Pulte.
Iran framework + Cuba/Castro
Iran Tentative Framework Continues · Raúl Castro Indicted for Murder by DOJ Iran 60-day framework pending · Castro murder indictment · Cuba tensions escalate
R
Iran: Tentative 60-day ceasefire framework still pending · Bessent: no sanctions without HEU turnover Castro: Raúl Castro charged with murder by DOJ · AG Blanche announced · Cuba tensions Graham: Wants congressional review of any Iran deal under INARA 2015
The tentative U.S.-Iran ceasefire framework remains pending — 60-day extension, Strait reopening, nuclear talks, with Bessent conditioning sanctions relief on HEU turnover. Meanwhile, the DOJ has indicted Raúl Castro for murder — AG Blanche announced the charges amid Trump's escalating posture toward Cuba and the "rumored Cuba attack" raised in Rubio's testimony. The Castro indictment is an extraordinary development connecting the Cuba tensions to active DOJ legal action. Graham continues to call for congressional review of any Iran deal under the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015. The Senate war powers final vote remains possible but is overshadowed this week by FISA and the parliamentarian fight.
FY2027 appropriations
FY2027 Appropriations — Senate Considering Several Bills · House THUD July 14 · Sept. 30 Deadline Senate considering FY2027 bills · Markups continuing · Government shutdown deadline Sept. 30
R
Senate: Considering several FY2027 appropriations bills this week House: THUD subcommittee markup July 14 · Full committee July 17 Deadline: September 30, 2026 · All 12 bills · Shutdown backstop
With reconciliation 2.0 done, the FY2027 appropriations process accelerates. The Senate is considering several FY2027 bills this week. House THUD subcommittee markup is July 14, full committee July 17. All 12 spending bills must pass by September 30 to avoid a government shutdown. The Iran war funding question — whether it goes through appropriations or reconciliation 3.0 — remains open, complicating the $1.5T Pentagon FY2027 request. With the reconciliation immigration fight finally resolved, appropriations and the third reconciliation bill become the dominant fiscal storylines heading toward the fall.
June 2026
Jun 1 Returns
Congress returns from recess · Reconciliation vote-a-rama resumes · FISA 11 days
Both chambers return from one-week recess. Reconciliation vote-a-rama resumes with anti-weaponization fund still unresolved. FISA expires June 12 with effective deal deadline ~June 9. Murkowski AUMF expected this week.
Returns
May 2026
Jun 3 HISTORIC
Iran War Powers Resolution — PASSED House · First chamber passage of conflict
House passed concurrent resolution directing Trump to remove U.S. forces from Iran hostilities — first time either chamber has passed a War Powers resolution on the Iran conflict. Required Republican crossovers (Fitzpatrick, Bacon, others). Goes to Senate. Trump expected to veto if Senate passes. Rubio called House Foreign Affairs hearing "chaos" and warned Iran would think administration's "hands tied."
Passed
Jun 9 Passed House → Trump
ICE/CBP Reconciliation Bill — Passed House 214–212 · Headed to Trump's desk
Party-line 214–212 vote ends 115-day immigration standoff. Funds ICE + Border Patrol through 2029. Anti-weaponization fund ($1.776B) survived unrestricted. Only crossover: Rep. Kiley (I-CA, former R) voted with GOP. Jan. 6 officers suing Trump over the fund. Tillis blasted colleagues for not blocking it. Goes to Trump for signature.
214–212
Jun 8 Demand
Trump demands Thune fire Senate parliamentarian over SAVE Act
Second such demand in 5 weeks. Parliamentarian MacDonough ruled SAVE Act can't pass via simple-majority reconciliation. Thune resisting — calls targeting "concerning." Would set precedent for future Democratic majorities and cost institutionalist R votes (Collins, Murkowski, McConnell).
Resisted
Jun 6 Blocked
Senate Democrats block FISA motion to proceed 47–52 over Pulte DNI appointment
All Democrats except Fetterman voted no, joined by 6 Republicans (Hawley, Lee, Paul, Schmitt, Scott, Tuberville). Democrats protesting Trump's appointment of FHFA director Bill Pulte as acting DNI. Pulte used FHFA role to dig up mortgage info on Fed Gov. Cook and NY AG James. Warner: can't authorize surveillance when Pulte could use intelligence against Trump's political enemies. Fast-track FISA path now dead.
47–52
Jun 5 Failed 49–49
Warner amendment to bar Pulte as acting DNI — Failed 49–49 · 3 R crossovers
Cassidy, Collins, and Murkowski voted to bar a Senate-confirmed agency head from serving as acting DNI. Failed 49–49. All three questioned Pulte's credentials. Pulte simultaneously serves as FHFA director.
49–49
Jun 7 Framework
Tentative U.S.-Iran 60-day ceasefire extension + Strait of Hormuz framework reached
Tentative agreement (not yet finalized) to extend ceasefire 60 days, reopen Strait of Hormuz, and establish nuclear talks framework. Bessent condition: no sanctions relief without Iranian HEU turnover. Graham calling for congressional review under Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act. Trump: daily conversations with Iran. Initial Pakistan talks in April failed; deal would reshape entire fall legislative calendar.
Tentative
Jun 3 Passed House
H.Con.Res. 86 — Iran War Powers Resolution · Passed House 215–208
First final passage of a War Powers resolution on the Iran conflict in either chamber. R crossovers: Massie (KY), Fitzpatrick (PA), Barrett (MI), Davidson (OH). Johnson had previously sent members home early to prevent the vote. Trump: "4 bad Republicans" in "meaningless vote." Goes to Senate — final vote not yet scheduled. Active Iran deal talks may moot the vote.
215–208
Jun 3 Statement
Fetterman: eliminating filibuster "we were so wrong, so wrong about that"
Sen. Fetterman reversed his prior position opposing filibuster elimination. Significant given Paxton and Cassidy successor elections — both more likely to push filibuster abolition. Fetterman has broken with Democrats on Warsh, Cekada, reconciliation, and War Powers throughout this session.
Reversal
Jun 2 Passed Senate
ICE/CBP Reconciliation Bill ($72B) — Passed Senate 51–50 · Vance breaks tie
Collins, Tillis, and Paul voted no. Ballroom and anti-weaponization fund both stripped. Funds ICE ($38.2B) + CBP ($22.57B) through FY2029 + $1.5B DOJ. Goes to House — Johnson targeting July 2 floor vote. Senate made Medicaid changes that may complicate House passage. Paul: "The big not so beautiful bill has passed."
51–50
Jun 1 Dropped
Anti-weaponization fund dropped — DOJ abides by court ruling · Reconciliation path clears
Trump administration backed down on $1.776B anti-weaponization fund Mon morning. DOJ announced compliance with Eastern District of Virginia court order blocking the fund. Thune called on White House to abandon it; Johnson met Trump personally. Republican leaders now confident $72B reconciliation bill can pass this week with fund removed. Democrats still plan amendment votes on fund.
Fund dropped
May 26 Primary loss
Sen. Cassidy (R-LA) loses primary to Trump-endorsed challenger
Second sitting Republican senator toppled in 2026 cycle after Cornyn. Cassidy voted to convict Trump at 2nd impeachment trial. Two fewer establishment-aligned Republican senators in next Congress. Both Paxton and Cassidy's successor more likely to support filibuster abolition.
Primary loss
May 26 Primary result
Ken Paxton defeats John Cornyn in Texas Senate GOP runoff — blowout
AP called race ~8 p.m. Paxton wins in blowout, ending Cornyn's 35-year electoral dominance. Trump endorsed Paxton; Thune/McConnell backed Cornyn. One GOP strategist: "Trump made a $100M mistake." Pence: GOP "lost our way." Paxton faces Democrat Talarico in November. Filibuster abolition a key Paxton campaign issue.
Paxton wins
May 21 Stalled
ICE/CBP Reconciliation Bill — $72B · Stalled · $1.8B anti-weaponization fund broke GOP
Vote-a-rama began but bill did not pass Thursday. New flashpoint: $1.8B "anti-weaponization fund" allowing DOJ to compensate those "wronged" by federal law enforcement — including potentially Jan. 6 rioters per VP Vance. Tillis: "stupid on stilts." Senate adjourned for recess. Vote expected week of June 1. June 1 Trump deadline missed. SAVE Act amendment failed 48–50 during vote-a-rama.
Stalled
May 20 Markup completed
Senate Budget Committee markup completed — Combines Homeland Security + Judiciary bills
Budget Committee completed its largely procedural markup combining the two committee reconciliation bills into one package. Floor vote-a-rama begins Thursday. Ballroom provision ($1B) stripped after parliamentarian ruling. CBO: $71.7B deficit impact over 2026–2035.
Markup done
May 19 Markup completed
Senate Judiciary Committee markup completed · Reconciliation ICE/CBP bill
Judiciary Committee completed its markup of the $30.73B ICE portion of the reconciliation bill. Budget Committee markup today (Wed). CBO estimates combined deficit impact $71.7B over 2026–2035. Floor vote-a-rama Thursday.
Markup done
May 17 Ruled out
Senate Parliamentarian rules $1B White House ballroom security provision CANNOT be in reconciliation
Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled Sat night that the ballroom provision spans multiple committee jurisdictions — cannot pass at simple-majority threshold. Six Republican senators had raised concerns. Graham says provision may go to a third reconciliation bill. Democrats to use as campaign messaging ("Ballroom Republicans").
Ruled out
May 15 Passed House
5-year farm bill passed the House last week. Bipartisan origins (7 Democrats voted yes in committee) but sharp floor opposition to SNAP cuts ($187B over 10 years) and pesticide liability shield. Includes E15 ethanol. Now awaiting Senate action — Senate Agriculture timeline unclear. Needs 60 votes in Senate.
Passed
May 15 Announced
Murkowski announces Iran AUMF introduction — pivots war debate to authorization with conditions
Sen. Murkowski announced she will introduce an Authorization for Use of Military Force for the Iran conflict when Congress returns. Working with several colleagues. Shifts debate from "stop the war" to "authorize with congressional conditions and oversight." Potential co-sponsors: Collins, Tillis, Curtis, Paul.
AUMF coming
May 15 Diplomatic
Trump lifts UK tariffs following King Charles joint address · First major tariff rollback
Following King Charles III's historic joint address to Congress Wednesday, Trump announced he is lifting tariffs on UK goods — the first significant tariff rollback of his second term. Charles proposed a toast to Trump. UK-US trade relationship restored.
Tariffs lifted
May 14 Renamed
Iran conflict renamed "Project Freedom" · Rubio: "Operation Epic Fury is over"
Rubio announced new phase focused on opening Strait of Hormuz. Legal strategy to reset War Powers Act clock. Democrats and 3 Republican senators rejected rebranding. Iran responding with strikes on Strait transit vessels. War cost confirmed at $29B Thursday.
Renamed
May 14 Hearing
Hegseth + Gen. Caine — Pentagon $1.5T FY2027 Budget Request · Iran war cost $29B
Back-to-back testimony before House and Senate Appropriations. $1.5T FY2027 request = 42% increase. Iran war cost confirmed $29B (internal estimates $50B+). Cole warned reconciliation for war funding "creates cliffs." Some Republicans pushing for third reconciliation bill for Iran defense spending.
$29B confirmed
May 14 Advanced
Digital Asset Market Structure Legislation — Advanced Senate Banking Committee
Bipartisan crypto market structure bill cleared Senate Banking Committee Thursday. Establishes SEC/CFTC jurisdiction framework for digital assets. Senate floor timing TBD.
Advanced committee
May 13 Confirmed
Kevin Warsh — Federal Reserve Chair · Confirmed 54–45 · Closest in modern era
Fetterman only Democratic crossover. 17th Fed chair of the modern banking era. First new Fed chair since 2018. Powell stays on as Fed governor. First FOMC meeting as chair: June 16–17. Warsh plans "regime change" at Fed — tighter Treasury coordination, smaller balance sheet.
54–45
May 13 Advanced
S.J.Res. 163 — Iran War Powers Resolution · 3 Republican crossovers for first time
Murkowski (R-AK), Collins (R-ME), and Rand Paul (R-KY) voted to advance — first time three Republicans crossed over in any of seven Iran war votes. Murkowski voting yes for the first time. Coalition now ~50 votes — one short of majority if Fetterman votes no. Tillis and Curtis have expressed concern. White House dismissed vote.
3 R crossovers
May 12 Confirmed
Kevin Warsh — Federal Reserve Board of Governors · Confirmed 51–45
Largely party-line; Fetterman (D-PA) the only Democratic crossover. 14-year term as Fed governor confirmed. Chair vote expected Wednesday. Powell's chair term expires Friday. Warsh plans "regime change" at the Fed — tighter Treasury coordination, smaller balance sheet, lower rates. Iran war oil price surge complicates the policy environment.
51–45
May 11 Cloture invoked
Kevin Warsh — Federal Reserve Chair Nominee · Cloture invoked Mon
Senate invoked cloture on Warsh nomination Monday evening. Confirmation vote expected Wednesday. Powell's term has expired; Warsh would immediately become Fed chair upon confirmation.
Cloture invoked
May 11 Confirmed
49 Trump Executive Branch Nominees Confirmed En Bloc
Senate confirmed 49 nominees in a single en bloc vote via S.Res. approval. Part of Thune's ongoing strategy to accelerate Trump administration staffing. Democrats objected but could not block.
49 confirmed
May 8 Released
ICE/CBP Reconciliation Bill Text Released — $72B · Through FY2029
Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees released full text of the $72B reconciliation bill funding ICE and Border Patrol through fiscal year 2029. Senate Judiciary business meeting to formally consider this week ahead of May 15 reporting deadline.
Text released
May 7 Escalation
U.S. Forces Attack Iranian-Flagged Tanker · Naval Blockade Enforcement
U.S. military attacked an Iranian-flagged tanker attempting to breach the Strait of Hormuz naval blockade — most significant military action since April 7 ceasefire. White House had declared hostilities "terminated" May 1. Iran revealed peace demands Trump rejected. Macron called for Strait reopening.
Tanker attacked
May 1 WH Letter
White House declares Iran hostilities "terminated" · War Powers clock reset disputed
White House sent formal letter to Congress declaring hostilities "terminated" even as naval blockade continues. Administration argues April 7 ceasefire pauses the 60-day clock. Democrats and 4 Republican senators rejected the framing. War Powers confrontation deferred.
Disputed
Apr 30 SCOTUS
Louisiana v. Callais — Supreme Court 6–3 · VRA Section 2 gutted
Conservative supermajority struck down Louisiana's 2nd majority-Black congressional district. Effectively nullifies VRA Section 2 majority-minority district requirements. Florida immediately enacted new gerrymander. Up to 19 House seats could shift R by 2028. Kagan dissent called it "setting back racial equality in electoral opportunity."
6–3
May 3 Indictment
Former FBI Director James Comey — Second Indictment
Indicted for posting a photo of seashells on a beach that prosecutors said amounted to a threat against President Trump. Comey denied the charge. Second indictment of Comey this session. Democrats called it politically motivated.
Indicted
April 2026
Apr 30 Enacted
P.L. 119-85 — DHS Appropriations (Non-ICE/CBP) · 76-day shutdown ended
House passed by voice vote; Trump signed Thursday afternoon. Funds TSA, Secret Service, Coast Guard, FEMA, CISA, and all non-immigration DHS agencies through Sept. 30. Longest agency-level shutdown in U.S. history ended. ICE/CBP on reconciliation track.
Signed
Apr 30 Enacted
P.L. 119-86 — FISA Section 702 45-Day Extension (3rd short-term patch)
Senate stripped CBDC ban, passed unanimously. House passed 261–111. Trump signed. New expiration: ~June 15. Third FISA short-term patch this session (Apr 18, Apr 30). 3-year deal still unresolved.
Signed
Apr 29 Confirmed
Robert Cekada — ATF Director · Confirmed 59–39
Bipartisan: 7 Democratic caucus members voted yes. First ATF director confirmed by a Republican president. Announced 34 regulatory reforms same day, including rescission of Biden-era pistol brace rule.
59–39
Apr 29 Passed House
Passed House 235–191. 42 Democrats yes, 22 Republicans no. CBDC ban attached dead on arrival in Senate — 45-day extension likely instead. FISA expires tonight.
235–191
Apr 29 Adopted
House adopted 215–211 party-line. Both chambers now adopted — reconciliation formally launched. Senate committees write ICE/CBP funding bill by May 15.
215–211
Apr 29 Rule passed
H.Res. 1224 — Rule for FISA + Farm Bill + Reconciliation
Rule passed 216–210 after 2+ hours open. Luna went no → present → yes after SAVE Act commitment. Rep. McGovern: "S---show."
216–210
Apr 29 Joint Address
King Charles III — Address to Joint Session of Congress
First British monarch to address Congress since 1991. Came amid UK-US tariff tensions. Johnson presided.
Joint session
Apr 27 Cloture invoked
Robert Cekada — ATF Director · Cloture invoked Mon
Cloture invoked on nomination. Confirmation vote scheduled today Apr 28. Expected party-line confirmation.
Cloture invoked
Apr 25 Shooting
White House Correspondents' Dinner Shooting — Washington Hilton
Cole Tomas Allen fired shots at security screening area outside WHCD. One Secret Service agent struck in vest, expected to recover. Trump, Vance, Cabinet evacuated. Allen arrested; charged with attempted assassination of the President. Manifesto cited "Friendly Federal Assassin." Galvanized DHS funding urgency.
1 agent wounded
Apr 23 Passed House
Geothermal energy bill passed the House Thursday. Waives NEPA review for certain federal land geothermal activities. Bipartisan support. Sent to Senate.
Passed
Apr 23 Cloture filed
Thune filed cloture on motion to proceed to S. 4344 immediately after budget resolution passed. Cloture vote possible as early as Monday Apr 27. Senate's FISA fallback now formally in motion.
Cloture filed
Adopted 50–48 at ~3:30 a.m. after 5-hour vote-a-rama. Murkowski and Rand Paul voted against with all Democrats. Graham amendment (violent criminal deportation) passed 98–0. All Democratic policy amendments failed. Now heads to House for adoption.
50–48
Apr 22 Failed
Sponsored by Sen. Baldwin (D-WI). Failed 46–51. Fetterman (D) voted no; Paul (R) voted yes — consistent with all prior votes. Grassley, McCormick, Warner absent. War Powers Act 60-day deadline arrives next week.
46–51
Senate voted 52–46 on strict party lines to proceed to the FY2026 budget resolution for ICE/CBP reconciliation. Instructs committees to draft $70B in immigration enforcement funding by May 15. Vote-a-rama expected Wed or Thu.
52–46
Apr 21 Resigned
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-FL) — Resigned
Resigned at 1:30 p.m., minutes before her House Ethics Committee sanctions hearing. Third member to resign in under two weeks (after Swalwell D-CA and Gonzales R-TX last week). House now 218R–213D, 4 open seats.
Effective 1:30 p.m.
Andrew B. Davis — U.S. District Judge, W.D. Texas
Confirmed 47–46. Collins (R) voted no. Seven senators not voting: Daines, Fetterman, Grassley, Murkowski, Risch, Sheehy, Warner. Third Trump W.D. Texas judge confirmed this session.
47–46
Apr 20 On Calendar
Placed on Senate Calendar via Rule XIV by Majority Leader Thune. Senate formally positioned to take lead on longer-term FISA deal before April 30 deadline.
Rule XIV
Apr 20 Passed
S.Res. 681 — Resolution honoring Chuck Norris
Adopted by voice vote. Memorial resolution for the late actor and martial artist.
Voice vote
Apr 18 Enacted
Signed into law Saturday by President Trump. Extends FISA Section 702 through April 30. Followed three failed House floor votes (18-month, 5-year, rule) Thursday night. Both chambers passed by unanimous consent.
Signed
Apr 16 Failed
Motion to discharge from Senate Foreign Relations Committee failed. Democrats could not win Republican crossover votes needed to force the bill to the floor.
47–52
Apr 16 Passed Senate
Passed Senate 50–49. Collins and Tillis (R) voted against; Hawley not voting. Sent to House. Would reverse Biden-era withdrawal of Iron Range federal lands from mining.
50–49
Apr 16 Cloture invoked
Andrew B. Davis — U.S. District Judge, W.D. Texas
Cloture invoked 49–48 on Trump judicial nominee. Confirmation vote scheduled no earlier than Monday April 20.
49–48
Apr 15 Failed
Motion to discharge from Foreign Relations Committee failed. Would have directed disapproval of U.S. arms sales to Israel.
36–63
Apr 15 Passed
Congressional Review Act disapproval of Biden-era Bureau of Land Management withdrawal of federal lands in Cook, Lake & St. Louis Counties, MN. Passed Senate; sent to House.
51–49
Apr 14 Confirmed
John Thomas Shepherd — U.S. District Judge, W.D. Arkansas
Trump judicial nominee confirmed by Senate. Part of ongoing judicial confirmation pipeline.
Party-line
Apr 13 Enacted
Signed April 13, 2026. Addresses small business innovation programs and economic security provisions.
Signed
Apr 8 Ceasefire
Iran–U.S. Ceasefire Takes Effect (Operation Epic Fury)
After 40 days of combat operations, a ceasefire brokered by Pakistan took effect. U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports imposed Apr 13 after peace talks in Islamabad collapsed. No AUMF passed by Congress.
March 2026
Mar 24 Confirmed
Markwayne Mullin — Secretary of Homeland Security
Sen. Mullin (R-OK) confirmed as DHS Secretary and resigned from Senate. Alan Armstrong appointed to fill his seat.
Mar 12 Passed Senate
Bipartisan housing supply bill passed Senate 82–11 with substitute amendment (S.Amdt. 4308). Returned to House with changes; House has not yet acted on Senate version.
82–11
February 2026
Feb 28 Military
Operation Epic Fury Launched — U.S.–Israel Strikes on Iran
Joint U.S.–Israeli military operation commenced. Supreme Leader Khamenei killed in opening strikes. Iran responded with missile/drone attacks; closed Strait of Hormuz. No congressional AUMF authorized. 40-day campaign until Apr 8 ceasefire.
No AUMF
Feb 25 Passed House
Requires documentary proof of citizenship to register for federal elections; photo ID to vote. Passed House 218–213. Currently stalled in Senate filibuster.
218–213
Feb 18 Enacted
Establishes a congressional time capsule for the U.S. 250th anniversary in 2026.
Signed
Feb 18 Enacted
Congressional Review Act disapproval of D.C. Council's income and franchise tax conformity amendment.
Signed
Feb 14 Shutdown
Partial DHS Shutdown Begins — Ongoing
DHS partial shutdown began when two-week CR expired. Democrats blocked DHS funding demanding ICE/CBP reform after CBP killing of Alex Pretti (Jan 24). ICE, CBP, TSA, FEMA, Secret Service among affected agencies. Shutdown ongoing as of April 16.
Day 75
Feb 10 Enacted
Requires federal agencies to cross-check payment records against the Social Security death master file to eliminate improper payments to deceased individuals.
Signed
Feb 9 Passed House
Bipartisan housing supply bill passed House. Includes zoning reform incentives, FHA loan limit increases, streamlined environmental reviews.
Bipartisan
Feb 6 Enacted
Reforms bankruptcy court administrative procedures and fee structures.
Signed
Feb 3 Enacted
Full-year FY2026 appropriations for all departments except DHS. Ended the 4-day general shutdown (Jan 31–Feb 3). DHS excluded due to Democratic objections over ICE/CBP reform.
Signed
Feb 3 Shutdown ends
First 2026 Shutdown Ends (4 days — Jan 31–Feb 3)
General government shutdown ended when P.L. 119-75 was signed. Shutdown caused by delay approving full-year appropriations package; DHS excluded and placed on 2-week CR.
January 2026
Jan 31 Shutdown
First 2026 General Government Shutdown Begins
Partial shutdown began when FY2025 continuing resolution expired. Affected approximately half of federal departments. Lasted 4 days until Feb 3 passage of Consolidated Appropriations Act.
4 days
Jan 23 Enacted
Signed Jan 23, 2026. Part of the FY2026 appropriations package covering Commerce, Justice, Science (including NASA/NSF), Energy and Water, and Interior/Environment departments.
Signed
Jan 22 Passed House
Final FY2026 Appropriations Package — 3 Bills
House passed final three FY2026 spending bills (Transportation/HUD 341–88; DHS 220–207; others) completing the House's work on annual appropriations. Senate Democrats subsequently blocked DHS portion.
341–88 / 220–207
Jan 20 Enacted
Amends title 38 to improve VA housing assistance programs for disabled veterans.
Signed
Jan 8 Veto sustained
Veto Override Attempts Fail — H.R. 504 & H.R. 131
House failed to override two Biden-era vetoes: Miccosukee Reserved Area Amendments Act (H.R. 504) and Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act (H.R. 131). Both vetoes sustained; bills died.
Override failed
Jan 5 Session opens
119th Congress 2nd Session Convenes
Second session of the 119th Congress begins. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) resigned same day. Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-CA) died Jan 6. Republican House majority: 218–214 at opening.