Bill Tracker 119th Congress · Updated June 2026

H.R. 51 · Washington, D.C. Admission Act

The House has passed this bill twice. The Senate has never held a floor vote. 700,000 Americans are still waiting. Here is what has already passed, and where every senator stands today.

  Status at a Glance, 119th CongressSource: Congress.gov · unitedstates/congress-legislators
0
Senate Floor Votes Ever
In 225 years, the Senate has never held a floor vote on DC statehood.
All-time Senate record
House Passed
116th & 117th Congresses. The bill cleared the House both times with majority Democratic support.
House roll call votes
47
Senators On Record
Forty-seven senators are on record supporting DC statehood as cosponsors or supporters of S. 51.
S. 51 cosponsors · 119th Congress
225
Years Without a Vote
DC residents have paid federal taxes without a voting representative in Congress since 1801.
IRS Data Book FY 2024 · U.S. Census
The Progress So Far

The House Has Voted for Statehood — Twice

No statehood effort in modern history has come this far. The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the Washington, D.C. Admission Act twice — the first time either chamber of Congress has ever voted to admit the District as a state. The record below shows how far the bill has traveled, and where it waits now.

CongressChamberBillVoteResultNotes
116th (2021)HouseH.R. 51216–208PASSEDFirst House passage. Sent to Senate, no action taken.
117th (2021)HouseH.R. 51216–208PASSEDSecond House passage. Senate, filibuster threshold not reached.
117th (2021–22)SenateS. 51n/aNO VOTEReferred to Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs. Never brought to the floor.
118th (2023–24)HouseH.R. 51n/aNO VOTERepublican majority. Did not advance out of committee.
119th (2025–26)SenateS. 51n/aNO VOTERepublican majority. 53–47 split. Filibuster reform is the threshold question.
The Senate Today

See Where Senators Stand on Statehood

Each dot is one of the 100 U.S. senators. The forty-seven green seats are on record supporting DC statehood — click any of them to see who. The navy seats are senators not yet on record as cosponsors or supporters of S. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act.

On record for statehood · 47 Not on record · 53
Select a senator to see where they stand.
Roster: unitedstates/congress-legislators, 119th Congress. “On record” reflects public cosponsorship of or on-record support for S. 51. Informational only. Last reviewed June 2026.

This page is provided for public education. Positions reflect public cosponsorship records and on-record statements only, and are not an endorsement of, or opposition to, any candidate for office. Sources: Congress.gov and unitedstates/congress-legislators.