A discharge petition is the House’s emergency override switch. It lets a majority of members force a bill to the floor, even when the Speaker or committee chairs don’t want it there.
It’s rarely successful. But when it is, it’s one of the most consequential procedural moves in the House.
How it works
A bill normally moves through committee before reaching the House floor. If a committee refuses to act, or if the Speaker keeps a bill bottled up, any member can file a discharge petition.
218 is a majority of the 435-member House. The signatures are public, which means every member who signs, or refuses to sign, is on the record.
Why it’s rare
Discharge petitions are politically expensive. Signing one means publicly defying your own party leadership. Members who break ranks risk losing committee assignments, fundraising support, or future leadership posts.
That’s why even popular bills can sit in committee for years without enough signatures. It’s not that members don’t support them. It’s that they don’t want to be the one to break with leadership.
The discharge petition is the most public way a House member can vote against their own party.
Why it matters
When a bill has majority support but won’t move, the signatures, and the missing signatures, tell you everything about where the real opposition lives. The official record shows whether the obstacle is votes, or leadership.
That distinction matters more than almost any political headline. And it’s exactly the kind of detail that gets lost in the noise.