To prohibit Federal funding of State firearm ownership databases, and for other purposes.
Sponsored By: Representative Gosar
Introduced
Summary
No summary available.
Bill Overview
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Bill
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Gosar
AZ • R
Cosponsors
Babin
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Bean (FL)
FL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Biggs (AZ)
AZ • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Biggs (SC)
SC • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Boebert
CO • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Brecheen
OK • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Burlison
MO • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Carter (GA)
GA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Cline
VA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Cloud
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Clyde
GA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Collins
GA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Crane
AZ • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Crawford
AR • R
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Crenshaw
TX • R
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Davidson
OH • R
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DesJarlais
TN • R
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Donalds
FL • R
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Downing
MT • R
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Ezell
MS • R
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Feenstra
IA • R
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Fine
FL • R
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Fleischmann
TN • R
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Franklin, Scott
FL • R
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Gooden
TX • R
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Grothman
WI • R
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Hageman
WY • R
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Harrigan
NC • R
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Harris (MD)
MD • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Harshbarger
TN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Higgins (LA)
LA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Hunt
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Jack
GA • R
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Jackson (TX)
TX • R
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Joyce (OH)
OH • R
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Kelly (PA)
PA • R
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Langworthy
NY • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Letlow
LA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Luna
FL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Massie
KY • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
McGuire
VA • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Messmer
IN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Miller (IL)
IL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Mills
FL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Moolenaar
MI • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Moore (AL)
AL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Moran
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Nehls
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Norman
SC • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Ogles
TN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Palmer
AL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Perry
PA • R
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Roy
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Rulli
OH • R
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Sessions
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Shreve
IN • R
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Stauber
MN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Stefanik
NY • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Steube
FL • R
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Stutzman
IN • R
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Taylor
OH • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Tenney
NY • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Tiffany
WI • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Timmons
SC • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Van Drew
NJ • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Van Duyne
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Van Epps
TN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Weber (TX)
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Webster (FL)
FL • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Williams (TX)
TX • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Rose
TN • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
McDowell
NC • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Amodei (NV)
NV • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Edwards
NC • R
Sponsored 2/25/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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HR38 — Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act of 2025
National concealed-carry reciprocity. This bill would create nationwide recognition of state concealed-carry licenses so people with a valid photo ID and a state permit or the right to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in many other States. - Gun owners and travelers: People not federally prohibited from firearms possession who hold a state concealed-carry license or are entitled to carry in their home State could carry a concealed handgun in States that issue permits or do not ban concealed carry. Machine guns and destructive devices are excluded. It would take effect 90 days after enactment. - State and property rights: States would keep the power to prohibit or restrict concealed carry on private property and on State or local government property. The bill also lists federal public lands and agencies where carrying would be allowed in publicly accessible areas, including National Park units and Forest Service land. - Criminal and civil protections: Officers may not arrest absent probable cause that the carry falls outside the law and prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt when the defense is raised. Prevailing defendants can recover reasonable attorney fees and may sue for deprivation of rights with damages.
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Condemns political violence. The resolution condemns the assassination of Charles 'Charlie' James Kirk, honors his life and leadership, and urges swift justice while offering sympathy to his family.
HR1301 — Death Tax Repeal Act
This bill would repeal the federal estate tax and the generation‑skipping transfer tax. It would also reshape gift tax rules by keeping tiered rates but creating a $10 million lifetime exemption indexed for inflation. - Heirs of people who die on or after enactment would not owe the federal estate tax. This removes that tax from those estates. - Donors and high‑net‑worth individuals would still face a gift tax, but under a tiered schedule from 18% to 35% and a $10 million lifetime exemption that is indexed for inflation after 2011. - Generation‑skipping transfers made on or after enactment would not be subject to the GST tax. Qualified domestic trusts for surviving spouses of decedents who died before enactment would follow transitional rules, including changed treatment of distributions after a 10‑year period beginning on the enactment date.
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.
HR1181 — Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act
Stops payment systems from assigning merchant codes that single out firearms sellers. This bill would prohibit payment card networks and covered entities from requiring or assigning merchant category codes that identify a retailer as selling firearms, ammunition, accessories, or firearm components. - Firearms retailers: Businesses could not be assigned MCCs that are used only or primarily for firearms retailers, which limits one way transactions could be labeled. - Payment card networks and covered entities: Networks and processors would be barred from requiring merchants to use or from assigning MCCs that identify a business as a firearms retailer. - Federal enforcement and oversight: The Attorney General would set up a complaint process within 90 days after enactment, investigate complaints, demand remediation within 30 days, and may seek federal injunctions. The bill would preempt state and local rules on assigning or disclosing these MCCs while allowing narrow fraud and security compliance exceptions and require annual reports to Congress on investigations and effectiveness.
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