What will be the outcome of the JUDGES Act by February 28, 2025?
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or modified • 25%
Official Congressional records or government publications
House Passes JUDGES Act for 66 New Judgeships, Faces Biden Veto Amid Trump's Re-election
Dec 12, 2024, 05:15 PM
The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Judicial Understaffing Delays Getting Emergencies Solved (JUDGES) Act, which aims to add 66 new district court judgeships to address judicial backlogs. This legislation, which had previously passed the Senate unanimously, now faces a veto threat from President Joe Biden. The bill was designed to distribute the appointment of new judges over several presidential terms, with 22 of the judgeships to be filled by President-elect Donald Trump during his next term. Despite initial bipartisan support, the political landscape shifted after Trump's re-election, leading to opposition from many Democrats, who argue that the timing of the House vote was politically motivated. The White House contends that the bill is unnecessary for the efficient administration of justice and that it would create judgeships in states where senators have sought to hold open existing judicial vacancies.
View original story
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Fails to become law • 25%
Becomes law after amendments • 25%
Becomes law without changes • 25%
Withdrawn or fails to pass • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or delayed • 25%
Vetoed and overridden • 25%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Signed into law • 25%
Vetoed and overridden • 25%
Withdrawn or stalled • 25%
Fails to pass • 34%
Vetoed by Biden • 33%
Becomes law • 33%
Becomes law without veto • 25%
Becomes law after veto override • 25%
Vetoed and not overridden • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Neutral • 25%
Opposed • 25%
Mixed reactions • 25%
Supportive • 25%
No further action taken • 25%
Bill remains vetoed • 25%
Bill passed with amendments • 25%
New version of bill introduced • 25%
Remains unchanged • 25%
Increased bipartisan support • 25%
Decreased bipartisan support • 25%
Bipartisan support collapses • 25%
Increase in support • 25%
Decrease in support • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Uncertain/Other • 25%
66 judgeships • 25%
No judgeships approved • 25%
More than 66 judgeships • 25%
Less than 66 judgeships • 25%
After February 2025 • 25%
Before January 2025 • 25%
In January 2025 • 25%
In February 2025 • 25%