All Roll Calls
Yes: 244 • No: 47
Sponsored By: Senator Roger Wicker
Passed Senate
Defense modernization and industrial‑base strengthening. This omnibus authorizes broad military procurement, nuclear and missile defense modernization, and new controls on AI, biotech, and supply chains while also including major housing and disaster recovery reforms.
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Roger Wicker
MS • R
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 244 • No: 47
senate vote • 10/9/2025
On Passage of the Bill S. 2296
Yes: 77 • No: 20
senate vote • 9/4/2025
On the Motion to Proceed S. 2296
Yes: 83 • No: 13
senate vote • 9/2/2025
On Cloture on the Motion to Proceed S. 2296
Yes: 84 • No: 14
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S3597 — National Quantum Initiative Reauthorization Act of 2026
Would reauthorize and expand the National Quantum Initiative to widen definitions and guardrails, scale U.S. quantum research and workforce development, and shore up domestic supply chains and research security. It would fund new NIST centers, create a national workforce Hub, require an OSTP-led international cooperation strategy, add NASA quantum activities, and tighten rules on partnerships with foreign countries and entities of concern. - Universities, National Laboratories, nonprofits, and small businesses would compete for new centers and grants. NIST program funding is authorized at $85.0 million per year for FY2026–2030 and centers may receive up to $18.0 million per center per year. - Students, community colleges, and workers would see new training and reskilling programs. A national Hub and expanded NSF traineeships, fellowships, and scholarships would coordinate curricula, recruit underrepresented groups, and link students to jobs. - Industry and national security would be affected by supply-chain resilience efforts, export-control coordination, prize challenges to accelerate breakthroughs, and explicit limits on partnerships with specified foreign countries and entities of concern. The OSTP must deliver an International Quantum Cooperation Strategy within one year. Would authorize new discretionary funding — for example $85.0 million per year for NIST and up to $25.0 million per year for NASA for FY2026–2030 and center grants up to $18.0 million each — which would increase federal spending if appropriated.
S1909 — Western Balkans Democracy and Prosperity Act
Strengthen democratic and economic resilience in the Western Balkans by expanding U.S. trade and investment, codifying sanctions, and funding programs to fight corruption, boost cyber defenses, and support civil society. - Codifies and preserves U.S. sanctions authorities tied to Executive Orders 13219 and 14033, allows presidential waivers with committee notice, and sets an 8-year sunset on those sanctions. - Requires a regional economic development and democratic resilience strategy within 180 days and creates a Regional Trade and Development Initiative to grow U.S. exports, support small and medium enterprises, and mobilize diaspora and private investment. - Funds anti-corruption programs and independent media support, rebrands and expands a Young Balkan Leaders Initiative with fellowship elements, and mandates a one-year interagency cyber report plus biannual unclassified reports on Russian and Chinese influence.
S1410 — Find It Early Act
The Find It Early Act would require no-cost breast cancer screening and diagnostic imaging for people at increased risk or with heterogeneously or extremely dense breasts across private plans, Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, and VA care. Coverage would follow the latest American College of Radiology or National Comprehensive Cancer Network criteria, have no frequency limits, and would take effect January 1, 2026. - Patients and private plans: Individuals identified as higher risk or with dense breast tissue could receive 2D or 3D mammography, breast ultrasounds, breast MRI, molecular breast imaging, or other technologies with no out-of-pocket costs and no limits on how often they can be screened. Health care providers could also order imaging for people not listed as at-risk when the latest guidelines indicate it is needed. - Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries: Medicare Part B would add a new no-cost-sharing category for these imaging services. Medicaid would add matching coverage triggers, ensure states offer the screenings in benchmark plans, and eliminate cost-sharing for the specified imaging. - Military families and veterans: TRICARE would eliminate cost-sharing for eligible beneficiaries and the Department of Veterans Affairs would be required to furnish the same no-copay screenings to qualifying veterans.
S688 — Fighting Foreign Illegal Seafood Harvests Act of 2025
Stopping illegal and forced‑labor fishing is the bill's main goal. It creates a U.S. policy and enforcement framework that uses an IUU Vessel List, targeted visa sanctions on vessel owners, and data and technology strategies to trace seafood tied to forced labor while boosting international cooperation and Arctic stock sustainability. - Workers and victims of forced labor: Requires U.S. agencies to develop data tools to identify seafood harvested with forced labor and creates a public IUU Vessel List that can trigger targeted visa sanctions on listed vessel owners. - U.S. enforcement and agencies: Directs the Coast Guard to expand boarding and inspection efforts, mandates data‑driven enforcement plans, and orders studies on new technologies like drones, remote observing, and satellite connectivity. - Partner countries and science programs: Funds technical assistance and capacity building for foreign fisheries, extends National Sea Grant authorization through 2031, and authorizes a focused National Academies study on IUU and forced labor. Authorizes $10.0 million annually from 2025 through 2030 for IUU Vessel List activities and $2.0 million for the National Academies study, plus extended Sea Grant appropriations authority.
S292 — Educational Choice for Children Act of 2025
Creates coordinated individual and corporate tax credits for donations to scholarship granting organizations to fund K–12 scholarships, while protecting parental choice and setting accountability rules. This bill would set up matching individual and corporate credits tied to qualified donations, define eligible students and expenses, and require oversight for scholarship organizations.
S93 — Harmful Algal Bloom and Hypoxia Research and Control Amendments Act of 2025
Creates a unified national framework to prevent, monitor, and respond to harmful algal blooms and hypoxia. It centers a federal Task Force, regular scientific assessments, and a required Action Strategy that covers both marine and freshwater systems. - Families, fishers, and subsistence communities gain expanded monitoring and toxin testing for recreational and subsistence harvesters, with specific attention to rural and remote areas. The Action Strategy must examine food safety, cultural uses, and economic harms. - Indian Tribes, States, and local governments must be consulted by the Task Force and can receive contracts, grants, or reimbursements for assessing and responding to events. The law lets federal officials waive non‑Federal cost shares when recipients cannot meet them. - NOAA and EPA get clear operational roles to build observing, forecasting, and data systems tied into the Integrated Ocean Observing System and the Water Quality Portal. The bill creates a national incubator for scalable HAB solutions and requires improved monitoring such as an annual Gulf of Mexico hypoxia mapping cruise. Authorizes about $27.5 million per year to NOAA and EPA plus $2.0 million per year for the NIDIS subsection for fiscal years 2026–2030, increasing federal spending.