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HRES 516 · 119th Congress · Crime and Law Enforcement

Condemning the violent June 2025 riots in Los Angeles, California.

Introduced June 17, 2025 Latest action June 27, 2025 8 cosponsors

Sponsor

Latest action

Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.

Action timeline

Every recorded action on this bill, newest first. Stage badges color-code the legislative path.

Jun 27, 2025
floor Considered under the provisions of rule H. Res. 530. (consideration: CR H3016-3023)
Jun 27, 2025
floor Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 3944, H.R. 275, H.R. 875 and H. Res. 516. The resolution provides for consideration of H.R. 3944 under a structured rule and H.R. 275, H.R. 875, and H.Res. 516 under a closed rule, with one hour of general debate on each measure. The resolution provides for one motion to recommit on H.R. 3944, H.R. 275, and H.R. 875.
Jun 27, 2025
floor DEBATE - The House proceeded with one hour of debate on H. Res. 516.
Jun 27, 2025
floor The previous question was ordered pursuant to the rule on the resolution and preamble.
Jun 27, 2025
passed Passed/agreed to in House: On agreeing to the resolution Agreed to by the Yeas and Nays: 215 - 195 (Roll no. 185).

Text versions

Each stage of the bill — official text published by GPO. Click any format to read on congress.gov / govinfo.

Jun 27, 2025 Engrossed in House
XML
Jun 17, 2025 Introduced in House
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CRS summaries

Plain-English summaries written by the Congressional Research Service — neutral, nonpartisan staff who summarize bills as they advance through stages. The authoritative description of what each version of the bill does.

via Congressional Research Service · published through congress.gov

Changelog

How a bill moves through Congress. Each stage produces a new official text. The diff between them shows what changed at that step.

  1. ih / isIntroduced in House / Senate. First filed version.
  2. rfh / rfsReferred to a committee for review.
  3. rh / rsReported back by the committee to the floor (often with amendments — this is where most language changes happen).
  4. pcs / pchPlaced on Calendar for floor consideration.
  5. eh / esEngrossed. Passed by the originating chamber. Text is now what was actually voted on.
  6. rdh / rdsReceived by the other chamber.
  7. eah / easEngrossed Amendment. The other chamber passed an amended version.
  8. ath / atsAgreed to. Both chambers settled on the same text.
  9. enrEnrolled. Final reconciled text, sent to the President.
  10. plPublic Law. Signed by the President. It's now law.
  11. ppPublic Print. Official printing post-enactment.

Most bills die before eh/es. Going from pcsenr is the full path through both chambers.

Line-level diff between text versions of this bill — what actually changed at each legislative stage.

+18 −38 11 unchanged
--- Introduced (House)
+++ Engrossed (House)
@@ -1,31 +1,12 @@
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
-[H. Res. 516 Introduced in House (IH)]
+[H. Res. 516 Engrossed in House (EH)]
<DOC>
+H. Res. 516
-119th CONGRESS
-1st Session
-H. RES. 516
+In the House of Representatives, U. S.,
-Condemning the violent June 2025 riots in Los Angeles, California.
-
-_______________________________________________________________________
-
-IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
-
-June 17, 2025
-
-Mrs. Kim (for herself, Mr. Calvert, Mr. Valadao, Mr. Fong, Mr. LaMalfa,
-Mr. Issa, Mr. McClintock, Mr. Obernolte, and Mr. Kiley of California)
-submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
-on the Judiciary
-
-_______________________________________________________________________
-
-RESOLUTION
-
-Condemning the violent June 2025 riots in Los Angeles, California.
-
+June 27, 2025.
Whereas, on June 6, 2025, protests began in response to lawful Federal
immigration enforcement actions by the United States Immigration and
Customs Enforcement personnel in Los Angeles, California;
@@ -76,18 +57,17 @@
and violent individuals over United States citizens: Now, therefore, be
it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
-(1) recognizes the right to assemble and protest
-peacefully;
-(2) condemns unequivocally the violence perpetrated against
-Federal, State, and local law enforcement;
-(3) calls on local and State elected leadership to work
-with the Federal Government to end the violent riots and
-restore peace; and
-(4) expresses gratitude to law enforcement officers,
-including the Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County
-Sheriff's Department, California Highway Patrol, Orange County
-Sheriff's Department, and other local, State, and Federal law
-enforcement agencies, including the United States Immigration
-and Customs Enforcement for keeping our communities safe in the
-face of danger.
-<all>
+(1) recognizes the right to assemble and protest peacefully;
+(2) condemns unequivocally the violence perpetrated against Federal,
+State, and local law enforcement;
+(3) calls on local and State elected leadership to work with the
+Federal Government to end the violent riots and restore peace; and
+(4) expresses gratitude to law enforcement officers, including the
+Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department,
+California Highway Patrol, Orange County Sheriff's Department, and other
+local, State, and Federal law enforcement agencies, including the United
+States Immigration and Customs Enforcement for keeping our communities
+safe in the face of danger.
+Attest:
+
+Clerk.

Cosponsors (7)

Members who signed on to support this bill.