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HR 10 119th Congress · House

H.R. Reserved for the Speaker

Advocate

Official title: Reserved for the Speaker.

This House bill is a placeholder measure introduced by Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana on January 3, 2025. It has no recorded committee activity, no hearings, no markup, and no cosponsors, and it has not advanced in either chamber. As introduced, it does not establish a substantive policy program, funding level, or eligibility change for the public.

  • Introduced in the House on January 3, 2025
  • Sponsored by Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA)
  • No cosponsors are recorded
  • No committee hearings, markups, or reported actions are recorded
  • No House or Senate passage has occurred
Public Relevance 5 / 100
Niche Narrow / procedural Broad

For the general public, this bill does not create a direct change in taxes, benefits, eligibility, or federal program rules. It mainly affects House procedure and the availability of a bill vehicle for future legislative use, so the practical effect on an average constituent is minimal.

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FOR
  • House leadership staff A reserved bill can preserve a legislative vehicle for later use, giving leadership flexibility to move quickly when a procedural or policy opportunity arises. That can be valuable in a fast-moving Congress where timing matters.
  • Majority-party lawmakers Keeping a bill number available can help the majority manage the floor agenda and attach future policy language to an existing vehicle. It can also streamline later negotiations if leadership decides to use it for a broader package.
  • Legislative aides and committee staff A placeholder measure can simplify internal planning by creating a ready-made shell for amendments or substitute language. That can reduce administrative friction when a bill needs to be advanced on short notice.
AGAINST
  • Transparency advocates Placeholder bills can make it harder for the public to understand what a measure will ultimately do until much later in the process. That can reduce clarity around legislative intent and policy direction.
  • Minority-party lawmakers A reserved vehicle can be used to accelerate majority-party priorities without the normal buildup of public debate around a fully developed bill. Opponents may see that as limiting meaningful scrutiny.
  • Budget watchdogs If a reserved bill later becomes a vehicle for major policy changes, it can obscure the true fiscal or regulatory scope until late in the process. That can make oversight and public analysis more difficult.
  • “Reserved for the Speaker.”

    This indicates the bill number is being held for leadership use rather than advancing an immediate policy proposal. In practice, it can serve as a legislative placeholder for later text or a broader package.

  • “IntroducedDate":"2025-01-03"

    The measure entered the process at the start of the 119th Congress. Early introduction often signals a vehicle intended for future procedural or strategic use.

  • “totalActions":0

    No recorded legislative movement has occurred yet. That means there has been no committee review, no floor debate, and no chamber vote.

  • “passedHouse":false

    The House has not approved the measure. Without House passage, it cannot move forward as a completed House-originated bill.

  • “cosponsors":{"total":0

    No additional lawmakers have signed on. A lack of cosponsors usually means the bill is not being promoted as a broad coalition measure at this stage.

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