How will bipartisan support for the JUDGES Act change by February 28, 2025?
Increased bipartisan support • 25%
Decreased bipartisan support • 25%
Remains unchanged • 25%
Bipartisan support collapses • 25%
Congressional voting records and news reports
House Passes JUDGES Act to Add 66 Judgeships, Faces Biden's Veto Threat
Dec 12, 2024, 03:57 PM
The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the Judicial Understaffing Delays Getting Emergencies Solved Act (JUDGES Act) with a vote of 236-173, which aims to add 66 new judgeships to federal district courts across 13 states over the next decade. This legislation, which was initially supported by both parties, has now encountered opposition from President Joe Biden, who has threatened to veto the bill. The bill passed the Senate unanimously in August but has become a point of contention following Donald Trump's election victory. The White House argues that the bill is unnecessary for the efficient administration of justice, while House Democrats have criticized the timing of the vote, suggesting it's politically motivated to benefit Trump's future judicial appointments. Despite the bipartisan support the bill once enjoyed, the political landscape has shifted, with 29 Democrats voting in favor and 2 Republicans against. This would mark the first major expansion of the federal judiciary since 1990, during Biden's final month in office.
View original story
Equal bipartisan support • 25%
Majority opposition from both parties • 25%
Majority Democrat support • 25%
Majority Republican support • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or modified • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Vetoed and overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or delayed • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Uncertain/Other • 25%
Decrease in support • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Increase in support • 25%
Majority support • 25%
Majority oppose • 25%
Even split • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Fails to pass • 34%
Vetoed by Biden • 33%
Becomes law • 33%
Vetoed and overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or stalled • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Signed into law • 25%
Decrease in nominations • 25%
Increase in nominations • 25%
Other impacts • 25%
No significant change • 25%
No new judgeships added • 25%
66 as proposed • 25%
Less than 66 • 25%
More than 66 • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Withdrawn or fails to pass • 25%
Becomes law without changes • 25%
Becomes law after amendments • 25%
Fails to become law • 25%