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Congress Moves to Kill Daylight Saving Time—What Happens Next Will Shock You

Congress Moves to Kill Daylight Saving Time—What Happens Next Will Shock You

The Sunshine Protection Act: Making Daylight Saving Time Permanent (Explained Simply)

What Is This All About?

Imagine the government saying, "We can’t give you more hours in a day, but we can change what time your clock says so it feels like you have more evening sunlight!" That’s basically what’s happening with a new bill called the Sunshine Protection Act.

FOX News Chief Congressional Correspondent Chad Pergram reports that the U.S. House of Representatives just passed this law. It wants to make Daylight Saving Time (the time with an extra hour of evening light) permanent—so we never change clocks twice a year again.

Important Point: Congress can’t actually change how much sunlight we get. The sun does its own thing. But lawmakers can change the rules about what number we put on the clock.

How Much Daylight Do We Actually Get?

Let’s look at the facts like we’re counting toys:

  • There are 86,410 seconds in a day.
  • That’s 1,440 minutes total.
  • In Washington, D.C., the most daylight happens in June: 14 hours and 57 minutes.
  • The shortest daylight is near winter: only 9 hours and 29 minutes.

Congress can’t change any of that. But they can alter how we perceive it (how we think about it based on the clock).

What the House Just Did

Lawmakers often like to give voters something nice—like tax cuts or removing annoying rules. Even though time is fixed, they’re trying to "give" people more daylight feeling.

  • The House voted 308 to 117 to approve the Sunshine Protection Act this week.
  • This law would permanently shift the U.S. onto Daylight Saving Time.
  • That means: no more "springing forward" (moving clock 1 hour ahead in spring) or "falling back" (moving it back in fall).
  • We’d stay on Daylight Saving Time forever—if it becomes real law.

Important Point: The sun is not in danger! It’s about halfway through its 10-billion-year life. Lawmakers aren’t saving the sun; they just want you to think they’re giving you more light.

What People Are Saying

Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.), a main sponsor, said:

"Polling shows that two-thirds of Americans want to unlock the clock. My bill is simply a solution to make Daylight Saving Time permanent. Allowing an extra hour of sunlight in the evening gives families more time for outside sports activities and school."

But wait—is it really extra light? Not exactly. It’s the same amount of light, just labeled differently:

  • Under Daylight Saving Time, it’s light at 7 p.m.
  • Under Standard Time, that same light would be at 6 p.m.

Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) said:

"Why are we forcing families, businesses, and communities to adjust their schedules every spring and fall? The twice-yearly clock change is a relic of the past that no longer reflects the way Americans live."

Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) said people in his state hated early darkness in fall:

"Kind of depresses me. Really kind of a doggy downer. So I’m kind of digging the fact that we’re going to fix it."

Why Some People Hate the Clock Change

The twice-a-year time swap is super annoying. Here are two funny stories:

  • A school custodian in Ohio reset classroom clocks from south to north. He set each to "7:10" based on his watch, not real time. By 4th grade, clocks were 20 minutes behind!
  • The author’s grandmother was told to change her clock at 2 a.m. Sunday. She asked, "You mean I have to sit up until two o’clock in the morning to change it?" Most people just hate the hassle.

The Only Opponent in the House

Only one lawmaker spoke against it: Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.).

Her complaints:

  • Congress should focus on food, fuel, and health care costs, not clocks.
  • She mentioned a bad experiment in the 1970s (explained below).

The 1970s Disaster: A Warning from the Past

In 1973, Congress tried permanent Daylight Saving Time for two years to fight the OPEC oil embargo (a foreign oil shortage). Here’s what happened:

  1. Kids in DC went to school around 8:30 a.m. in pure darkness—some used flashlights.
  2. In Dec 1973, 79% liked the change.
  3. By Aug 1974, only 42% liked it.
  4. Sen. Bob Dole killed the project; everyone "fell back" to standard time by fall.
  5. A House panel said clock changes must respect public dislike.

What Happens Next?

  • In 2022, the Senate passed a similar bill, but the House ignored it.
  • Now the House passed an updated version.
  • President Trump called clock switches "ridiculous" and supports ending them.
  • Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) says Trump is enthusiastic; the Senate may vote soon.

Important Point: If the Senate passes it and the President signs, the U.S. will be on permanent Daylight Saving Time. But some, like Dean, remember the 1970s failure.

Summary

The House passed the Sunshine Protection Act (308–117) to make Daylight Saving Time permanent. Congress can’t add sunlight but can change clock labels. Most lawmakers and Trump support it; one opposed, citing 1970s problems. The Senate may soon vote. Remember: permanent DST means no more clock flips, but history shows public mood can shift.

FAQ

Q1: What is Daylight Saving Time?
A: It’s the time of year when clocks are moved 1 hour ahead so evenings have more daylight. The Act would make this forever.

Q2: Does this give us more actual sunlight?
A: No. The sun gives the same light; the law just says the clock number is 1 hour later (light at 7 p.m. instead of 6 p.m.).

Q3: Why did it fail in the 1970s?
A: Kids went to school in the dark and people got unhappy; support dropped from 79% to 42% in eight months.

Q4: Who is against the bill now?
A: Mainly Rep. Madeleine Dean, who says Congress should fix costs, not clocks, and recalls the 1970s mess.

Q5: Is the sun going to explode?
A: No! It’s halfway through a 10-billion-year life. The "Sunshine" name is just for show.

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