H.J. Res. 105 (119th)Bill Overview

Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Bureau of Land Management relating to "North Dakota Field Office Record of Decision and Approved Resource Management Plan".

Public Lands and Natural Resources|Administrative law and regulatory proceduresDepartment of the Interior
Cosponsors
Support
Republican
Introduced
Jul 10, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageLaw

Became Public Law No: 119-49.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

This joint resolution invokes the Congressional Review Act to disapprove and nullify a Bureau of Land Management (BLM) action titled the "North Dakota Field Office Record of Decision and Approved Resource Management Plan" (issued January 14, 2025).

The resolution states that Congress disapproves that rule, that it shall have no force or effect, and cites a Government Accountability Office opinion concluding the document is a rule under the Congressional Review Act.

Passage45/100

By content the resolution is low-complexity and uses a well-established procedural vehicle (the CRA), both factors that facilitate congressional action relative to a broad or costly policy rewrite. However, the political salience of public land decisions and the all-or-nothing nature of CRA disapprovals raise opposition risks in the Senate and create a binary outcome that depends on the executive branch’s posture; those dynamics lower the lawmaking likelihood compared with technical, noncontroversial fixes.

CredibilityAligned

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a concise, legally framed CRA disapproval that clearly identifies the targeted rule and invokes the statutory authority for nullification. It provides the minimal, customary language needed to remove the rule's force and effect.

Contention70/100

Whether nullifying the BLM plan protects public-land conservation (liberal view it harms protections; conservative view it limits federal overreach and may enable development).

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
Local governmentsFederal agencies
Likely helped
  • Targeted stakeholdersReduces regulatory constraints that supporters say could hinder energy development, mining, grazing, or other land uses…
  • Targeted stakeholdersPreserves or protects jobs in extractive and land‑use industries (e.g., oil and gas, mining, agriculture, and related s…
  • Local governmentsLimits new federal regulatory requirements and administrative burdens for industry and local governments that would hav…
Likely burdened
  • Targeted stakeholdersRemoves or delays land‑use planning measures that advocates of the BLM plan may have intended to provide for conservati…
  • Federal agenciesUndermines long‑term federal land management planning and agency expertise by overturning an agency-approved plan, whic…
  • Targeted stakeholdersMay negatively affect tribes, recreation groups, or conservation businesses if the disapproval removes protections or m…
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Whether nullifying the BLM plan protects public-land conservation (liberal view it harms protections; conservative view it limits federal overreach and may enable development).
Progressive20%

A mainstream liberal would likely view this disapproval skeptically because it cancels a BLM rule without detail in the resolution about whether the plan provided protections for public lands, habitats, or climate goals.

They would be concerned that congressional nullification of a BLM resource management plan could roll back or delay environmental safeguards and public-interest planning.

They would also note the resolution uses the Congressional Review Act to short-circuit agency decisionmaking and might see this as setting a precedent for politicized oversight of land-management science.

Likely resistant
Centrist50%

A pragmatic centrist would focus on process and outcomes: they would acknowledge Congress has oversight authority but would want more detail about what the BLM plan actually did.

They would weigh the benefits of correcting a flawed rule against the costs of creating regulatory uncertainty.

Absent specifics about the content of the RMP, a centrist would likely be ambivalent and emphasize the need for a careful, transparent follow-up planning process.

Split reaction
Conservative85%

A mainstream conservative would likely view the resolution favorably because it cancels a federal land-management rule and reinforces congressional authority over significant agency actions.

They would interpret the move as limiting federal regulatory reach and potentially opening more flexibility for state or local priorities and resource development in North Dakota.

They would also see the CRA as an appropriate check when GAO determines a record of decision operates as a rule.

Leans supportive
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Reached or meaningfully advanced

President

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Law

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Passage likelihood45/100

By content the resolution is low-complexity and uses a well-established procedural vehicle (the CRA), both factors that facilitate congressional action relative to a broad or costly policy rewrite. However, the political salience of public land decisions and the all-or-nothing nature of CRA disapprovals raise opposition risks in the Senate and create a binary outcome that depends on the executive branch’s posture; those dynamics lower the lawmaking likelihood compared with technical, noncontroversial fixes.

Scope and complexity
24%
Scopenarrow
24%
Complexitylow
Why this could stall
  • The text does not include the substance of the underlying BLM record of decision and resource management plan, so the precise policy changes being reversed—and their local economic or environmental impacts—are unknown.
  • CRA resolutions’ prospects depend heavily on the positions of the chamber majorities and the President (sign/allow veto/issue a veto), which are not reflected in the bill text and thus represent major procedural uncertainty.
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Whether nullifying the BLM plan protects public-land conservation (liberal view it harms protections; conservative view it limits federal o…

By content the resolution is low-complexity and uses a well-established procedural vehicle (the CRA), both factors that facilitate congress…

Unlocked analysis

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a concise, legally framed CRA disapproval that clearly identifies the targeted rule and invokes the statutory authority for nullification. It provides the minimal,…

Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.

Perspective breakdownsPassage barriersLegislative design reviewStakeholder impact map
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