GOP Revolt Forces House Shutdown as Johnson Scraps Votes, Sends Lawmakers Home Early
House Republican leaders were forced to halt legislative business Tuesday and dismiss lawmakers nearly two weeks ahead of schedule after a rebellion within the GOP blocked key procedural action, derailing President Donald Trump’s legislative agenda and bringing the House to a standstill.
According to Politico, much of the internal dispute revolved around frustration over the stalled SAVE America Act—one of President Trump’s signature legislative priorities—as well as broader concerns about the House’s handling of immigration-related measures.
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) argued that House Republican leadership should abandon its current strategy and instead incorporate the SAVE America Act directly into the National Defense Authorization Act.
“The current plan being proposed by HOUSE GOP to ‘MIRV’ NDAA + SAVE AMERICA is a procedural head fake,” Luna wrote on X. “This does not do anything but guarantee the Senate will EASILY TAKE OUT SAVE America from the NDAA.”
Luna called on House leaders to permit an amendment that would place voter ID requirements and proof-of-citizenship provisions directly into the defense authorization bill.
She maintained that doing so would significantly reduce the likelihood that the Senate could strip the election-security language from the legislation.
The disagreement ultimately sank the procedural rule needed to move legislation to the House floor. The measure was defeated by a 224-198 vote after 14 Republicans broke with party leadership and joined Democrats in opposition, forcing GOP leaders to cancel scheduled votes and begin the Independence Day recess ahead of schedule.
Earlier in the day, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) had expressed optimism that negotiations would continue and that Republicans could still complete their work before leaving Washington.
Instead, leadership shelved action on several major bills, including the annual National Defense Authorization Act, the fiscal year 2027 State Department appropriations measure, and additional legislation that had been scheduled for consideration.
Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) said the failure to advance immigration legislation was the chief reason he voted against the procedural rule.
“We certainly didn’t see either committee action or floor action on it,” said House Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Harris (R-Md.). “That disappointed a number of people, myself included.”
The failed vote was also fueled by disagreements over proposed amendments to the defense authorization bill, further exposing divisions within the Republican conference.
Roy later posted: “I remain hopeful we can move forward soon with a productive, conservative agenda. Authorizing our Department of War and strengthening our national defense are essential, but House Leadership must first demonstrate that it is serious about delivering on the commitments it has made.”
The latest setback continues a slowdown in House activity that began last week, as Republican leaders have struggled to assemble enough support within their own conference to advance key portions of President Trump’s legislative agenda.
{Matzav.com}
