Mike Johnson gets bypassed more than any past speaker
Briefly

Mike Johnson gets bypassed more than any past speaker
Johnson proposed House rule changes to make discharge petitions harder to succeed. A discharge petition introduced by Rep. Donald Norcross gained 218 signatures on Wednesday, including 211 Democrats and seven Republicans, forcing a vote on legislation aimed at speeding up unionization negotiations. Norcross introduced the petition on April 20, and Reps. Don Bacon, Riley Moore, and Nick LaLota signed it exactly a month later. This was the eighth time in the 119th Congress that a discharge petition reached the 218-signature threshold. Two petitions reached the threshold in 2024, bringing the total to 10 in the last two years. The 119th Congress has the most successful-threshold discharge petitions since the tool’s modern form began. Two 2024 petitions became law, while only one 119th Congress petition became law so far, with others stalled in the Senate. Johnson also shut down Rep. Anna Paulina Luna’s discharge petition to allow limited proxy voting.
"Johnson briefly floated changes to House rules last year to make it harder for discharge petitions to succeed. He said at the time the tactic was "too common," with Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) saying he would "like to see a higher threshold for a lot of these motions.""
"A discharge petition introduced by Rep. Donald Norcross (D-N.J.) hit 218 signatures on Wednesday. It will force a vote on legislation aimed at speeding up unionization negotiations. The petition was signed by 211 Democrat and seven Republicans, with Reps. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), Riley Moore (R-W.Va.) and Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.) providing the final signatures. The turnaround was lightning fast: Norcross introduced the petition on April 20 and the trio of Republicans signed it exactly a month later."
"This is the eighth time in the 119th Congress that a discharge petition has reached the necessary 218 signatures to force a House vote. Two other petitions secured 218 signatures in 2024, for a total of 10 in the last two years. That represents more than 20% of the successful discharge petitions since 1935, according to data compiled by Axios' Kate Santaliz. The 119th Congress has seen the most discharge petitions hit the necessary signature threshold of any congressional session since the tool was created in its modern form, according to Good Authority."
"The petitions have had a mixed record so far. The two in 2024 - one to expand Social Security benefits to retirees who receive certain government pensions, and the other to provide tax breaks to victims of natural disaster - both got signed into law. But just one of the eight discharge petitions this year - the Epstein Files Transparency Act - has become law, with several others passing the House but languishing in the Senate. Johnson even managed to effectively shut down Rep. Anna Paulina Luna's (R-Fla.) discharge petition to allow limited proxy voting for House membe"
Read at Axios
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]