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Rescission bill
US government procedure to rescind previously appropriated funding From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A rescission bill is a type of bill in the United States that rescinds funding that was previously included in an appropriations bill. Rescission bills proposed by the President of the United States are considered under an expedited process that cannot be filibustered in the Senate, allowing it to pass with 51 votes instead of 60. The procedure was introduced in 1974 as a replacement for impoundment. It was widely used between its introduction and 2000, but then fell into disuse. It was revived during the Trump administrations, with an unsuccessful proposal in 2018 and a successful proposal in 2025.
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Procedure
The rescission process is described in 2 U.S.C. ch. 17B, subch. II. The process begins with the president submitting a rescission proposal to the House Committee on Appropriations and Senate Committee on Appropriations. Each committee has 25 days to approve or disapprove the proposal; if a committee takes no action the bill becomes subject to a discharge petition. Each House considers the bill under an expedited procedure that does not allow a filibuster in the Senate. The bill must be passed within 45 days after the original proposal to be enacted, and the budget authority is delayed during these 45 days.[1][2]
In practice, rescission proposals have usually been incorporated into larger appropriations bills considered through the normal process rather than passed as standalone bills using the expedited process.[3] In addition to the presidential rescission procedure, Congress may initiate rescissions as part of a normal appropriations bill.[4][5]
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History
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The rescission process was instituted by the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974. It was a replacement for the broad impoundment authority that was removed by the bill. The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Reaffirmation Act of 1987 prohibited repeatedly submitting identical or similar rescission proposals to extend the 45-day window for delaying the budget authority.[3]
Between 1974 and 2000, presidents submitted 1178 rescission proposals totaling $76 billion, of which Congress accepted 461 totaling $25 billion.[4] The last presidential rescission proposal during this period was made for fiscal year 2000 during the Clinton administration.[3] No presidential rescission proposals were requested during the presidencies of George W. Bush or of Barack Obama,[1][4] although George W. Bush proposed "cancellations" of funding in the 2007 federal budget through a message that did not use the formal presidential rescission procedure.[3]
In April 2018, President Donald Trump announced his intention to develop a rescission proposal in response to the large funding increases contained in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, which had passed the previous month.[6][7] The proposal was scaled back, however, after pushback by Congressional leadership to include $15 billion in rescissions mainly targeting funds that were already unspent. In June 2018, the bill, the Spending Cuts to Expired and Unnecessary Programs Act (H.R. 3), passed the House 210–206 but failed in the Senate 48–50.[8][9]
In June 2025, President Trump during his second term made a rescission proposal to cancel $8.3 billion from specific foreign aid programs from the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development, and $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.[10][11] This bill, the Rescissions Act of 2025, passed the House on June 12.[12] An amended version of the bill passed the Senate on July 17.[13]
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References
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