S.J. Res. 82 (119th)Bill Overview

Disapprove HHS Policy on Adhering to the Text of…

CRA DisapprovalGovernment Operations and Politics|Administrative law and regulatory proceduresCongressional oversight
Cosponsors
Support
Democratic
Introduced
Sep 18, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageIntroduced

Failed of passage in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 50 - 50. Record Vote Number: 654.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief
CRA DisapprovalWhat this resolution actually does

This resolution uses the Congressional Review Act to reject a specific rule issued by the Department of Health and Human Services. If Congress passes the resolution and the President signs it, the rule would have no force or effect and the agency would be barred from issuing a substantially similar rule without new legislation. The CRA also provides expedited consideration in Congress so the disapproval can be decided quickly.

Rule targeted

Policy on Adhering to the Text of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Issuing agency

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

Passage rules

Under the CRA, disapproval measures receive expedited consideration and are not subject to a Senate filibuster, so they can pass by a simple majority in both chambers; after passage they are presented to the President, who may sign or veto.

This joint resolution invokes the Congressional Review Act (chapter 8 of title 5, U.S. Code) to disapprove a rule issued by the Office of the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services titled "Policy on Adhering to the Text of the Administrative Procedure Act," published March 3, 2025.

The resolution notes a Government Accountability Office opinion (dated August 27, 2025) concluding that the Policy Statement is a rule subject to the CRA, and states that the specified rule "shall have no force or effect." The resolution was introduced in the Senate and placed on the legislative calendar after committee discharge by petition.

Passage35/100

Content-wise the resolution is narrow, administratively simple, and fiscally neutral, which favors congressional consideration. However, because it directly negates an executive-branch rule and affects agency authority, its ultimate success depends on cross-branch alignment: it requires majorities in both chambers and presentment to the President. The absence of compromise language and the potentially partisan nature of administrative law make passage into law less likely if the executive branch opposes it or if the Senate lacks a clear majority willing to act under the CRA.

CredibilityAligned

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a conventional Congressional Review Act disapproval resolution that clearly identifies the target rule and provides the standard statutory remedy (nullification). It is terse but functionally sufficient for a CRA joint resolution.

Contention70/100

Progressives emphasize preserving agency flexibility for public-health and civil-rights enforcement; conservatives emphasize enforcing APA procedural limits to restrain agency discretion.

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Likely benefits vs burdens50% / 50%
Federal agenciesFederal agencies

These are examples from the analysis, not a ranked list of the most-affected groups.

Likely helped
  • Federal agenciesPreserves existing agency procedural practices and the status quo for how HHS issues regulations and guidance, which su…
  • Federal agenciesPrevents HHS from imposing an internal rule that supporters view as potentially limiting agencies' ability to interpret…
  • Potential benefitAvoids creating a precedent that agencies can use an internal policy to change regulatory process without clear public…
Likely burdened
  • Potential burdenRemoves an HHS attempt to set a uniform internal approach to applying the Administrative Procedure Act, which critics o…
  • Federal agenciesConstrains the agency's ability to adopt executive-branch procedural reforms implemented through internal policy, poten…
  • Federal agenciesReasserts congressional control over the specific agency action pursuant to the CRA, which critics may contend shifts t…
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Progressives emphasize preserving agency flexibility for public-health and civil-rights enforcement; conservatives emphasize enforcing APA procedural limits to restrain agency discretion.
Progressive80%

A mainstream liberal/left-leaning observer would likely view this resolution as a protective action to prevent HHS from adopting a policy that could limit agencies' ability to use guidance, informal actions, or interpretive flexibility when implementing public-health, civil-rights, or social programs.

They would expect the disapproval to preserve agencies' ability to act quickly in emergencies and to retain longstanding administrative practices that rely on guidance rather than formal notice-and-comment rulemaking.

Because the bill explicitly nullifies the HHS policy, liberals would see it as a check on what they might perceive as an effort to narrow administrative remedies or slow regulation.

Leans supportive
Centrist60%

A centrist/moderate observer would approach the resolution cautiously, focusing on process, precedent, and legal clarity.

They would see a legitimate congressional role under the CRA to review agency rules but would want more information about the content of the HHS policy before choosing a firm position.

Centrists would weigh the benefits of preserving agency flexibility against the value of clear, predictable administrative-law rules that limit arbitrary agency action.

Split reaction
Conservative15%

A mainstream conservative observer would likely oppose this resolution, viewing it as a move to block an HHS policy that—by its title—appears intended to make agencies adhere more strictly to the text of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Conservatives generally favor limiting administrative discretion and subjecting significant agency actions to formal notice-and-comment procedures; therefore they would see congressional disapproval as undermining efforts to restrain regulatory overreach and restore procedural regularity.

They would view the CRA disapproval as a politicized response that protects flexible agency practices at the expense of rule-of-law constraints.

Likely resistant
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Still ahead

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood35/100

Content-wise the resolution is narrow, administratively simple, and fiscally neutral, which favors congressional consideration. However, because it directly negates an executive-branch rule and affects agency authority, its ultimate success depends on cross-branch alignment: it requires majorities in both chambers and presentment to the President. The absence of compromise language and the potentially partisan nature of administrative law make passage into law less likely if the executive branch opposes it or if the Senate lacks a clear majority willing to act under the CRA.

Scope and complexity
24%
Scopenarrow
24%
Complexitylow
Why this could stall
  • The bill text does not state how consequential the canceled HHS policy would have been in practice; impact on stakeholders and public opinion is unknown.
  • The resolution's prospects depend on whether the executive branch supports or would veto congressional disapproval; the text provides no indication of executive alignment.
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

SENATE · Dec 18, 2025
Approve resolution✗ FailedClose voteParty-line

The Senate rejected this resolution. It does not carry the official position of the chamber.

What is a approve resolution?

A resolution is a formal statement or decision by the chamber. Simple resolutions apply only to one chamber; joint resolutions require both chambers.

Yes 50% No 50%
Against party line
Showing a quick cross-section of legislators, with followed members first when available.
SENATE · Dec 10, 2025
Begin consideration✓ PassedClose voteParty-line

The Senate agreed to bring this bill to the floor. Debate and amendment votes can now begin.

Yes 51% No 49%
Against party line
Showing a quick cross-section of legislators, with followed members first when available.
06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Progressives emphasize preserving agency flexibility for public-health and civil-rights enforcement; conservatives emphasize enforcing APA…

Content-wise the resolution is narrow, administratively simple, and fiscally neutral, which favors congressional consideration. However, be…

Unlocked analysis

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a conventional Congressional Review Act disapproval resolution that clearly identifies the target rule and provides the standard statutory remedy (nullification).…

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
Open full analysis