On H.R. 9237, His Rules Vote Kept Off the Floor the Amendment That Would Have Dropped the Veterans' Benefit Cuts

Veterans Source: House Rules Committee Report DOCUMENTED PATTERN

Why This Matters

The Take Care of America’s Veterans Act (H.R. 9237) is a large veterans package with real benefit expansions — and a pay-for that the country’s major veterans groups say cuts future disability compensation for two of the most common service-connected conditions. As the fight played out in June 2026, its House sponsors’ messaging framed the objecting groups as fear-mongers. This entry does not attach that messaging to Rep. Langworthy — he did not post it and does not serve on the Veterans’ Affairs Committee. It documents the one action on this bill that is his: a recorded vote on the Rules Committee, where he sits, on whether the full House could vote to pass the bill’s popular centerpiece without those cuts.


The Bill, Briefly

H.R. 9237 (sponsored by House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Mike Bost; introduced June 10, 2026; consolidating more than 60 bills) contains genuine expansions — caregiver reforms including a new bowel-and-bladder care program (Secs. 302, 332), student-veteran support (Title II), and a new allowance for catastrophically disabled veterans (Sec. 104). Its centerpiece is the Major Richard Star Act (Sec. 101), a popular bipartisan measure letting certain combat-disabled retirees receive both retirement pay and disability compensation.

The controversy is the pay-for. Section 108 rewrites VA rating rules so that, for claims filed after enactment, sleep apnea controlled by a CPAP machine is rated 0% and tinnitus loses its separate compensable rating. About 1.3 million veterans currently receive compensation for sleep apnea and roughly 1.5 million for tinnitus. According to a VA analysis cited by the DAV, VFW, and IAVA, the changes would reduce future disability payments by about $57 billion over ten years (no Congressional Budget Office score was located; this figure is attributed to that analysis, not asserted as CBO). Existing ratings are protected — Sec. 108(c)(2) bars reducing compensation already in effect, so no current veteran’s benefit is cut.

The major veterans service organizations oppose the bill over that offset: the VFW (“A grateful nation pays its debts to veterans; it does not send them the invoice”), the DAV (“condemns congressional proposal to cut disability benefits for 1.5 million veterans”), and IAVA, along with the AFGE and AFL-CIO. It also has supporters, including the American Legion and the Elizabeth Dole Foundation. As opposition mounted, House leadership pulled the bill from the floor around June 25, 2026; it has not received a passage vote.


The Messaging That Surfaced His Vote

The post that drew attention to this fight was published by the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs GOP account — the committee majority’s official page — not by Rep. Langworthy:

“It’s clear some groups are misleading veterans on the Take Care of America’s Act. They would rather focus on spreading fear through dangerous graphics than speak about the historic policies in the legislation. HR 9237 delivers MAJOR benefit expansions – including caregiver reforms, support for student veterans, and more support for catastrophically disabled veterans.”

We include it only as the context that put a spotlight on the bill. On its own terms it omits that the groups “spreading fear” are the VFW, DAV, and IAVA, and that the disputed cut is written into Section 108 — but that is the committee’s framing, not Langworthy’s, and this entry does not attribute it to him.


His Vote

Langworthy is not a cosponsor of H.R. 9237. His documented action came on the Rules Committee, where he is one of nine majority members. At the June 23, 2026 meeting (H. Rept. 119-707), by recorded vote:

  • Record Vote 369 — Nay. The motion was to make in order Rep. Takano’s amendment, which the committee report describes as striking H.R. 9237 and replacing it with the text of the Major Richard Star Act alone, using Defense funds from the 2025 reconciliation law as the offset — i.e., passing the popular centerpiece without the sleep-apnea/tinnitus cuts. It was defeated 4–8; Langworthy voted to keep it from reaching the floor.
  • Record Vote 373 — Yea. He voted to report the closed rule (H.Res.1377), which barred all floor amendments to the bill.

In plain language: there was a specific, recorded chance to advance the veterans’ provision everyone praises without the benefit cut the veterans’ groups oppose. On the committee that decides what the House may vote on, Langworthy voted to keep that option off the floor, and to bar amendments entirely.


The Fair Counterpoint

This is, mechanically, ordinary majority behavior: closed rules are routine, a Rules member is expected to support the leadership’s rules, and these committee votes broke on party lines. The votes are procedural — on whether the House may consider an amendment under a closed rule, not up-or-down votes on the amendment’s merits — and this entry does not claim his was a deciding vote or that the amendment would have passed the full House. It also credits what is real: the bill’s benefit expansions exist, and no current veteran loses a rating.

The narrower point stands. The clean, on-the-record choice in front of the Rules Committee was whether to let the House vote on delivering the Major Richard Star Act without the disability-rating cuts. Langworthy voted no, and to close the rule. It is the third instance this term of the same pattern — voting to report closed rules and to keep softening amendments off the floor — following the Medicaid cuts and the tariff-termination resolutions.


What Is — and Isn’t — Established

Documented from official records: the bill’s expansions and its Sec. 108 pay-for, with existing ratings protected (Sec. 108(c)(2)); the VFW/DAV/IAVA/AFGE/AFL-CIO opposition and American Legion/Dole Foundation support; the pulled floor vote; and Langworthy’s recorded Rules votes (H. Rept. 119-707, votes 369 and 373).

Attributed, not asserted: the “$57 billion” figure (a VA analysis cited by the veterans groups, not a CBO score).

Explicitly not claimed: that Langworthy made the “misleading veterans” statement (the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee GOP account did, and he is not on that committee); that current veterans lose ratings (Sec. 108(c)(2) protects them); or that he sponsored the bill (he did not).


Questions This Raises

  1. On the Rules Committee, why vote to keep off the floor the amendment that would have delivered the Major Richard Star Act without the disability-rating cuts?
  2. The bill offsets a popular benefit by reducing future compensation for sleep apnea and tinnitus. Is documenting that trade-off “spreading fear,” or reading the bill?
  3. If the objections are baseless, why did House leadership pull H.R. 9237 rather than hold the vote?


Sources


Note: The “misleading veterans / dangerous graphics” statement quoted above was posted by the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs GOP account (the committee majority), not by Rep. Langworthy, who does not serve on that committee; this entry does not attribute it to him and includes it only as context. Accountability here attaches to his own recorded Rules Committee votes (H. Rept. 119-707). The entry credits the bill’s genuine expansions and the fact that existing ratings are protected (Sec. 108(c)(2)); the “$57 billion” figure is attributed to a VA analysis cited by the veterans groups, not a CBO estimate. The committee votes are procedural — on whether the House may consider an amendment under a closed rule.

Last updated: July 3, 2026