All Roll Calls
Yes: 408 • No: 0
Sponsored By: Representative Nunn, Zachary [R-IA-3]
Passed House
Sets a fixed beneficial ownership information (BOI) filing deadline of January 1, 2026 for companies formed or registered before January 1, 2024. The bill amends 31 U.S.C. 5336(b)(1)(B) to replace the prior regulation-linked timetable with this single deadline.
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1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
If enacted, companies formed or registered before January 1, 2024 would have until January 1, 2026 to file beneficial ownership information reports. This would replace the prior deadline that depended on Treasury regulation dates. It would not change who must report or what information is required. The change would take effect upon enactment.
Nunn, Zachary [R-IA-3]
IA • R
Rep. Davids, Sharice [D-KS-3]
KS • D
Sponsored 1/24/2025
Emmer
MN • R
Sponsored 1/24/2025
Davis (NC)
NC • D
Sponsored 1/24/2025
Rep. Huizenga, Bill [R-MI-4]
MI • R
Sponsored 1/28/2025
Salazar
FL • R
Sponsored 1/28/2025
Stutzman
IN • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. De La Cruz, Monica [R-TX-15]
TX • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Barr
KY • R
Sponsored 2/4/2025
Rep. Fischbach, Michelle [R-MN-7]
MN • R
Sponsored 2/5/2025
Rep. Steil, Bryan [R-WI-1]
WI • R
Sponsored 2/6/2025
Rep. Meuser, Daniel [R-PA-9]
PA • R
Sponsored 2/7/2025
Rep. Downing, Troy [R-MT-2]
MT • R
Sponsored 2/7/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 408 • No: 0
house vote • 2/10/2025
On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass
Yes: 408 • No: 0
HR452 — Miracle on Ice Congressional Gold Medal Act
This law awards Congressional Gold Medals to the 1980 U.S. Olympic Men's Ice Hockey Team as a formal recognition of their Lake Placid victory and its lasting effect on American morale and the sport of hockey. It directs the Treasury to strike the medals and sets rules for duplicates, display, and funding. - Team legacy and public recognition: The Act honors the 1980 team with a symbolic national award that reinforces their historical and cultural significance for fans, players, and communities connected to the game. - Museum displays and research access: One gold medal goes to the Lake Placid Olympic Center, one to the United States Hockey Hall of Fame Museum in Eveleth, Minnesota, and one to the United States Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs for display and research. - Mint operations and collectibles: The Secretary of the Treasury will strike the medals, may sell bronze duplicates at prices that cover costs, and classifies the medals as national and numismatic items. The U.S. Mint Public Enterprise Fund pays for production and receives proceeds from duplicate sales.
HR6955 — Main Street Act
Tailors federal banking rules to support community and small banks. It would also speed new bank formation and merger reviews while adding formal appeals, agency transparency, and targeted resolution tools. - Community banks and new charters: Would phase in federal capital requirements for newly insured institutions over three years and let them request business‑plan deviations with expedited agency action. Raises the Community Bank Leverage Ratio asset cutoff to $15 billion and adds a short‑form Call Report option. - Rural banks, credit unions, and small institutions: Defines rural depository institutions under a $10 billion asset cutoff and orders studies on rural revitalization. Creates supervisory relief for well‑managed firms with assets $6 billion or less, including limited‑scope exam cycles and combined exam options. - Mergers, resolution, and oversight: Standardizes merger completeness and decision timelines with a 30‑day completeness check and a 120‑day approval deadline, plus GAO and IG reviews of merger and failure decisions. Establishes an independent Board review for material supervisory determinations and expands transparency about global regulatory engagement.
HR1422 — Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025
This Act would expand and intensify U.S. sanctions on Iran's petroleum and petrochemical sectors to cut revenue that could fund nuclear, missile, and terrorist programs. It also builds in humanitarian and safety exceptions and a behavior-based termination trigger.
HR2102 — Major Richard Star Act
Establishes concurrent receipt for retirees with combat-related disabilities. This bill would let eligible retirees receive both military retired pay and veterans' disability compensation for the same months without the offset rules that currently reduce payments. - Families of disabled retirees: Veterans with combat-related disabilities would receive both retired pay and VA disability compensation for the same months, increasing their monthly household income. - Defense and VA payment rules: The bill would amend 10 U.S.C. 1413a and 10 U.S.C. 1414 to exempt retired pay from reductions under 38 U.S.C. 5304 and 5305 and add a clear monthly no-offset rule. - Implementation and technical changes: It renames and updates chapter sections, adjusts cross-references, and applies to payments beginning the first month after enactment.
HR1919 — Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act
Bars the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) or any similar digital asset. It would also stop Fed banks from offering accounts or financial products to individuals and prevent using a CBDC to carry out monetary policy, while leaving a narrow exception for an open, permissionless, privacy-preserving dollar-like currency. - Households and individuals: Would block the Fed from holding accounts for people or providing financial products directly, limiting any direct relationship between individuals and Federal Reserve banks. - Federal Reserve and monetary policy: Would ban the Board of Governors from testing, studying, developing, creating, or implementing a CBDC and bar the Fed and the Federal Open Market Committee from using a CBDC to conduct monetary policy. - Banks and intermediaries: Would forbid the Fed from indirectly offering a CBDC through banks or other intermediaries, but exempts a fully private, open, dollar-denominated currency that preserves cash-level privacy.
HR979 — AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act of 2025
This bill would require AM broadcast capability to be installed as standard equipment in passenger motor vehicles. It focuses on driver-accessible AM reception, allows digital AM audio to count for compliance, and links vehicle AM capability to emergency alerting through IPAWS. - Drivers and households: Built-in, driver-accessible AM reception would make it easier for people to get local AM stations and emergency alerts from their vehicles. The bill allows devices that receive digital AM to meet the requirement. - Vehicle manufacturers: The Department of Transportation would need to issue a rule within 1 year, with a general compliance deadline no later than 2 years after the rule is issued. Small manufacturers that produced no more than 40,000 passenger vehicles in 2022 would get at least 4 years to comply. - Oversight and emergency systems: States would be barred from imposing their own AM-access rules. The bill mandates interim labels and pricing protections for cars without AM, authorizes civil penalties and DOJ injunctions for violations, requires a GAO study and a congressional briefing within 1 year, and includes an 8-year sunset for the authority.
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