Federal Legislation
Congress Revises D.C. Home Rule Oversight
January 27, 2026
Congress enacted the District of Columbia Home Rule Improvement Act of 2025, which modifies the Home Rule Act to extend the congressional review period for D.C. laws, executive orders, and regulations to a uniform 60 days. The legislation authorizes Congress to disapprove provisions of D.C. laws and executive actions through resolutions and establishes expedited procedures for congressional consideration of such disapproval. It also limits the D.C. Council's ability to withdraw or reintroduce substantially similar legislation after congressional disapproval.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals working with the District of Columbia government should anticipate potential delays or changes in local legislation affecting procurement policies due to the extended congressional review period.
- The enhanced congressional oversight may impact the timing and stability of D.C. procurement regulations and executive actions, requiring contractors to monitor legislative developments closely.
- Organizations engaging with D.C. agencies should evaluate the implications of possible congressional disapproval resolutions on contract terms and compliance requirements.
- This change underscores the importance of maintaining flexible procurement strategies when operating within the District of Columbia jurisdiction.
Agencies
District of Columbia Council, Mayor of the District of Columbia, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, House of Representatives
Locations
Sources
- H. Rept. 119-463 - DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA HOME RULE IMPROVEMENT ACT OF 2025 · congress · Jan 27