House is expected to vote on a bill Tuesday to limit federal district court judges’ ability to block the president Donald Trump’s National scale agenda.
Earlier this year, Rep. Darrell Issa He supports the bill.
House Republicans see it as a way to oppose a “rogue” judge to block Trump’s agenda.
Since the Republican Prime Minister took office, the Trump administration has faced more than 15 national bans, with its broad policies targeting Trump, ranging from birthright citizenship reform to anti-diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

Judges Donald Trump and James Boasberg. (Getty Image)
The ISSA bill would restrict district judges (of which more than 670 judges) from issuing rulings with national effects. Instead, they will be forced to customize these rulings for the specific parties designated in the lawsuit.
It has received widespread support from House Republicans and Republican leadership.
But Issa told Fox News Digital that he doubted it would receive any democratic support.
“Sadly, I’m not sure I’ll do it. Obviously, it should be done.” “The government can win 15 times, they lost once – they got the ban. It’s not supposed to be.”

Rep. Darrell Issa participated in the third day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee on July 17, 2024. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Issa pointed out that the promoted district judge is not only a Republican complaint.
“I mean, we can call [President Joe Biden’s] The former deputy attorney general asked, did you change your opinion in less than a year? Of course, the answer is no. ” he said.
Former Deputy Attorney General Elizabeth Prelogar proposed in a filing filed with the Supreme Court in December that a district court judge banned the Biden administration from enforcing the financial crime law, “the general ban puts significant pressure on the court’s emergency, and they visited substantial damage to the law enforcement.”
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House Speaker Mike Johnson held the gavel after being re-elected as Speaker of the House at the first session of the 119th General Assembly. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The legislation was proposed by the House Rules Committee on Monday night without democratic support.
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Votes are expected last week, but an unrelated fight derailed the remote vote of new parents and sent lawmakers home less than 24 hours after returning to Washington this week. That’s Since the solution.
Procedural votes are expected to be held around 1:30 p.m. ET. As expected, if it passes, lawmakers will debate and vote on the last bill later in the day.
It must pass the Senate (at least some democratic support is required to reach the 60 vote threshold) before heading to Trump’s desk for signature.