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VisitWhat will be the outcome of the U.S. Senate vote on H.J. Res. 136 by December 31, 2024?
Passes with majority support • 33%
Fails to pass • 33%
Not brought to a vote • 34%
Official U.S. Senate voting records and announcements
U.S. House Votes 215-191 to Repeal Biden EPA Tailpipe Emissions Rules with H.J. Res. 136
Sep 20, 2024, 03:53 PM
The U.S. House of Representatives narrowly voted to repeal the Biden administration's EPA tailpipe emissions rules. The resolution, H.J. Res. 136, led by Rep. James, aims to end what Republicans describe as a de facto electric vehicle (EV) mandate. The Biden administration's rule, adopted in March, sought to cut fleetwide tailpipe emissions by 50% over 2026 levels by 2032. House Republicans argue that the rule limits consumer choice and jeopardizes the auto industry. Democrats, however, see this move as an attack on the Clean Air Act and a gift to Big Oil allies. The resolution passed with a vote of 215-191, with eight Democrats supporting it and one Republican opposing it. The White House has pledged to veto the resolution.
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Passes with more than 50 votes • 25%
Passes with exactly 50 votes • 25%
Fails with less than 50 votes • 25%
No vote taken • 25%
Pass with majority Republican support • 25%
Pass with bipartisan support • 25%
Fail with majority Republican support • 25%
Fail with bipartisan opposition • 25%
Passed with majority Republican support • 25%
Passed with majority Democratic support • 25%
Failed with majority Republican opposition • 25%
Failed with majority Democratic opposition • 25%
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6-10 • 25%
11-15 • 25%
More than 15 • 25%
Tied vote • 25%
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Pass with majority • 33%
Fail to pass • 33%
Filibustered • 34%
Passed in both House and Senate • 25%
Passed in House only • 25%
Passed in Senate only • 25%
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0-5 Democrats • 25%
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11-15 Democrats • 25%
More than 15 Democrats • 25%
Republican Party • 33%
Democratic Party • 33%
Equal votes • 34%
Passed without amendments • 25%
Passed with amendments • 25%
Rejected • 25%
No vote by deadline • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Majority support the rules • 25%
Majority oppose the rules • 25%
Public opinion remains divided • 25%