S2960119th CongressWALLET

Deter PRC Aggression Against Taiwan Act

Sponsored By: Senator James Risch

In Committee

Summary

Deter PRC aggression against Taiwan by creating a formal interagency process to identify targets and prepare sanctions and economic actions as a rapid response. The bill would set firm timelines for a task force, require classified reporting, and preserve existing U.S. policy toward Taiwan.

Show full summary
  • Creates a PRC Sanctions Task Force led by the State Department's Coordinator for Sanctions and the Director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, coordinating with the Director of National Intelligence and other agencies. The task force would have to be established within 180 days and must brief congressional committees on proposed targets and actions within 180 days of establishment.
  • Directs the task force to identify military and nonmilitary entities across sectors such as shipping, logistics, energy, maritime, aviation, ground transportation, and technology for possible sanctions. It would assess how current sanctions could be used, propose new authorities if needed, analyze economic impacts, and recommend mitigation measures like licenses or carve-outs.
  • Requires coordination with allies and partners to leverage sanctions and to plan economic support to Taiwan. Any sanctions the task force recommends would need explicit legal authority under existing law or from a new Act of Congress.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this bill affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.

Create PRC sanctions task force

If enacted, the bill would require State and Treasury to set up a PRC Sanctions Task Force within 180 days. The Task Force would identify military and non‑military entities that could face sanctions after major PRC actions against Taiwan. Within 180 days of being set up, it would brief specified congressional committees on targets, how to use existing sanctions, new authorities needed, economic impacts, mitigation options, ally coordination, and resource gaps. The Task Force would send a classified report to those committees within 180 days after the briefing and yearly after that.

Limit unilateral sanctions; preserve policy

If enacted, the bill would say Task Force recommendations do not by themselves impose sanctions. Any sanctions would need an existing federal law in force before enactment or a new Act of Congress. The bill would also state it does not change the United States' One China policy.

Sponsors & CoSponsors

Sponsor

James Risch

ID • R

Cosponsors

  • Jeanne Shaheen

    NH • D

    Sponsored 10/9/2025

  • Christopher Coons

    DE • D

    Sponsored 10/16/2025

  • Pete Ricketts

    NE • R

    Sponsored 10/16/2025

  • Michael Bennet

    CO • D

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • John Cornyn

    TX • R

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • Andy Kim

    NJ • D

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • Ted Budd

    NC • R

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • Bill Hagerty

    TN • R

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • Rick Scott

    FL • R

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • John Boozman

    AR • R

    Sponsored 11/3/2025

  • Jeff Merkley

    OR • D

    Sponsored 11/10/2025

  • Roger Wicker

    MS • R

    Sponsored 11/10/2025

  • David McCormick

    PA • R

    Sponsored 12/2/2025

Roll Call Votes

No roll call votes available for this bill.

View on Congress.gov
Back to Legislation

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in