A joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Department of Education relating to "Final Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection Criteria-Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools Program (CSP)-Grants to State Entities (State Entity Grants); Grants to Charter Management Organizations for the Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (CMO Grants); and Grants to Charter School Developers for the Opening of New Charter Schools and for the Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools (Developer Grants)".
This joint resolution nullifies a Department of Education rule published on July 6, 2022, concerning final priorities, requirements, definitions, and selection criteria for the Charter Schools Program.
VOTE BREAKDOWN
Final passage · 78 politicians tracked
39
YEA
37
NAY
0
PRESENT
2
NOT VOTING
BY PARTY
MONEY ON THIS BILL
Top donor industries among YEA voters vs NAY voters · lobbying activity in affected industries
⬆ YEA voters — top donor industries
⬇ NAY voters — top donor industries
◎ Lobbying activity by issue area
No bill-issue lobbying matches.
“Pts” = sum of per-member industry donation scores (% of total donations from that industry, summed across the group). Higher means that industry funds a larger share of contributions for that voting bloc.
INDIVIDUAL VOTES
Recorded positions for tracked politicians







































SPONSORS

Tim Scott
R-SC · Primary
20 COSPONSORS
REPUBLICAN





+14 more (see dot grid above)
SPONSOR FUNDING
Top industries funding Scott
TRAIL AI
SJRES 60 is a joint resolution that would invoke the Congressional Review Act to disapprove of a federal regulation, though the specific regulation targeted is not identified in the provided data. The measure is currently in committee and has not advanced to a full floor vote. In the vote shown, all 39 Republican supporters voted in favor while all 35 Democratic senators who voted opposed it, with no crossover support from either party.
Based on public voting records. Does not imply causation.
TIMELINE
DATA SOURCES
Bill data: Congress.gov · 117th–119th Congress (2021–present)
Vote records: House Clerk / Senate · 2021–present
Reflects public records. Does not imply causation.