HRES953-119

Passed House

Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 6703) to ensure access to affordable health insurance; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 498) to amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to prohibit Federal Medicaid funding for gender transition procedures for minors; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3492) to amend section 116 of title 18, United States Code, with respect to genital and bodily mutilation and chemical castration of minors; and relating to consideration of the bill (H.R. 4776) to amend the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 to clarify ambiguous provisions and facilitate a more efficient, effective, and timely environmental review process.

119th Congress Introduced Dec 17, 2025

Legislative Progress

Passed House
Introduced Committee Passed
Dec 17, 2025 (inferred)

Passed House (inferred from eh version)

Dec 17, 2025

Dec 17, 2025

Mr. Griffith, from the Committee on Rules, reported the following …

House Roll #344

On Agreeing to the Resolution

Providing for consideration of the bills (H.R. 6703) Lower Health Care Premiums for All Americans A…

Passed
213 Yea 209 Nay 11 Not Voting
Dec 17, 2025
House Roll #343

On Ordering the Previous Question

Providing for consideration of the bills (H.R. 6703) Lower Health Care Premiums for All Americans A…

Passed
204 Yea 203 Nay 26 Not Voting
Dec 17, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

H.Res.953 is a House Rules Resolution that sets up the procedural rules for debating and voting on four separate bills. It is not a substantive policy bill itself, but rather a procedural vehicle that determines how the House will consider H.R. 6703 (affordable health insurance), H.R. 498 (Medicaid funding restrictions for gender transition procedures for minors), H.R. 3492 (criminal penalties related to bodily procedures on minors), and H.R. 4776 (NEPA reform).

Who Benefits and How

House majority leadership benefits from streamlined floor procedures that limit debate time and restrict amendments. By waiving all points of order and consolidating multiple bills under one procedural resolution, the majority party can more efficiently move its legislative priorities to a vote. Sponsors of the underlying bills (H.R. 6703, H.R. 498, H.R. 3492, H.R. 4776) benefit from guaranteed floor consideration with favorable procedural protections.

Who Bears the Burden and How

House minority members face restricted ability to challenge provisions through points of order, limited debate time (one hour per bill), and only one motion to recommit per bill. This reduces opportunities for substantive amendments or procedural objections. Groups affected by the underlying bills (healthcare providers, environmental advocates) also have reduced opportunity for input through the legislative process.

Key Provisions

  • Waives all points of order against consideration and provisions of four substantive bills
  • Limits debate to one hour per bill, equally divided between majority and minority committee leadership
  • Permits only one motion to recommit per bill, limiting minority procedural options
  • Automatically adopts a committee amendment in the nature of a substitute for H.R. 3492
  • Preserves ongoing agency corrective actions from NEPA reform provisions in H.R. 4776
Model: claude-opus-4
Generated: Dec 27, 2025 17:35

Evidence Chain:

This summary is derived from the structured analysis below. See "Detailed Analysis" for per-title beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

Primary Purpose

House Rules Resolution that establishes procedural rules for floor consideration of four bills: H.R. 6703 (affordable health insurance), H.R. 498 (Medicaid funding restrictions), H.R. 3492 (minors protection from bodily procedures), and H.R. 4776 (NEPA amendments).

Policy Domains

Congressional Procedure Healthcare Environmental Policy

Legislative Strategy

"Package multiple contentious bills under a single rules resolution to streamline floor consideration, waiving points of order and limiting debate time and amendment opportunities"

Likely Beneficiaries

  • House majority leadership (gains procedural control over bill consideration)
  • Health insurers (H.R. 6703 may affect market access)
  • Federal agencies (H.R. 4776 preservation clause protects ongoing corrective actions)

Likely Burden Bearers

  • House minority members (limited debate time and amendment opportunities)
  • Environmental advocacy groups (limited ability to challenge NEPA amendments)
  • Healthcare advocacy groups (limited input on Medicaid and health insurance provisions)

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Healthcare Health Insurance
Actor Mappings
"committees"
→ ['Education and Workforce', 'Energy and Commerce', 'Ways and Means']
Domains
Healthcare Medicaid
Actor Mappings
"committees"
→ ['Energy and Commerce']
Domains
Criminal Law Healthcare
Actor Mappings
"committees"
→ ['Judiciary']
Domains
Environmental Policy Administrative Procedure
Actor Mappings
"federal_agencies"
→ Federal agencies subject to NEPA

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology