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Senate daylight saving time hearing: “Stuck with this since World War I”

by Caroline Linton
April 10, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Senate daylight saving time hearing: “Stuck with this since World War I”

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A Senate committee heard from several experts Thursday on setting a year-round time standard, a few months after President Trump vowed to get rid of daylight saving time.

“Time is always complicated and the system we have is complicated, but it’s complicated because it’s a human creation,” said Scott Yates, the founder of the Stop the Clock movement, which supports getting rid of twice-yearly time changes. 

“The sun moving around the earth doesn’t actually have anything to do with time,” Yates said. “We need this system, but this system has this bug right now, and the bug is daylight saving time, the switching of the clocks. And so if we have a little bit of time, a couple of years, so the individual states can address all of these complexities and make those decisions, then we will be able to get rid of this bug permanently. It is something we have been stuck with since World War I, and this is our opportunity to finally fix it.” 

The Senate Commerce Committee hearing notice did not set a preference for daylight saving time or standard time, but instead said it would focus on “various issues around whether the country should continue ‘springing forward’ and ‘falling back’ each year with time.”

Daylight saving time begins in March, when clocks are moved forward an hour, and ends in October, when the clocks go back to standard time. 

The twice-yearly time changes are generally unpopular among Americans, with 63% saying they would like to eliminate them completely, compared to just 16% who said they would not, according to an Economist/YouGov poll in November 2021. 

A 2020 commentary for the journal JAMA Neurology found evidence linking the annual transition to daylight saving time to increased strokes, heart attacks and teen sleep deprivation.

The Senate in 2022 passed a bill called the Sunshine Protection Act to make daylight saving time permanent, but the bill never went anywhere in the House. The 2022 bill had 17 cosponsors from both parties and was spearheaded by then-Sen. Marco Rubio, who is now the Secretary of State in the Trump administration.

But Mr. Trump possibly threw a wrench in the idea in December, when he posted on social media that “Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our Nation.” In the same post, he said the “Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t!” 

Mr. Trump in the past had supported making daylight saving time permanent — that is, keeping clocks shifted one hour ahead, which happens in the spring. His December comment called for daylight saving time to be eliminated. 

In addition to Yates, testifying Thursday was Jay Karen, chief executive officer of the National Golf Course Owners Association; Karin Johnson, practicing physician and professor of neurology at UMass Chan School of Medicine Baystate, on behalf of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine; and David Harkey, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

Caitlin Yilek

contributed to this report.

More from CBS News

Caroline Linton

Caroline Linton is an associate managing editor on the political team for CBSNews.com. She has previously written for The Daily Beast, Newsweek and amNewYork.

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Caroline Linton

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