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Bill > HRes375
US HRes375
US HRes375Providing for consideration of the bill (H.B. 10) to create hope and opportunity for investors, consumers, and entrepreneurs by ending bailouts and Too Big to Fail, holding Washington and Wall Street accountable, eliminating red tape to increase access to capital and credit, and repealing the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act that make America less prosperous, less stable, and less free, and for other purposes.
summary
Introduced
06/06/2017
06/06/2017
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
12/31/2018
12/31/2018
Introduced Session
115th Congress
Bill Summary
Providing for consideration of the bill (H.B. 10) to create hope and opportunity for investors, consumers, and entrepreneurs by ending bailouts and Too Big to Fail, holding Washington and Wall Street accountable, eliminating red tape to increase access to capital and credit, and repealing the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act that make America less prosperous, less stable, and less free, and for other purposes. Sets forth the rule for consideration of the bill (H.B. 10) to create hope and opportunity for investors, consumers, and entrepreneurs by ending bailouts and Too Big to Fail, holding Washington and Wall Street accountable, eliminating red tape to increase access to capital and credit, and repealing the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act that make America less prosperous, less stable, and less free.
AI Summary
This Resolution sets the rules for debating and amending H.R. 10, a bill aimed at fostering economic growth by ending government bailouts of large financial institutions (referred to as "Too Big to Fail"), increasing accountability for those in government and on Wall Street, reducing regulations to make it easier for businesses to access money and loans, and repealing parts of the Dodd-Frank Act, a law enacted after the 2008 financial crisis that this bill's proponents argue hinders prosperity, stability, and freedom. Specifically, the resolution allows the Speaker to bring H.R. 10 to the House floor for debate, waives all objections to its consideration, limits general debate to 90 minutes, and establishes a structured process for amendments, allowing only those specifically listed in a committee report to be considered, with strict time limits and no further amendments to those proposed changes.
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection. (on 06/07/2017)
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