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All Legislation

Legislation of the 119th Congress

Track bills, resolutions, and amendments moving through Congress

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MapWatchScheduleDaily RecordMembersCommitteesLegislationNominationsMoneySpecial RulesSubpoenasHouse EthicsForeign InfluenceAgenciesRegulationsOffice SpendingUS Code

7 Legislation

  • Californiasenator·Alejandro Padilla
    S-3582

    No Rewards for January 6 Rioters Act

    70%
    Sense of Congress
    Voting Rights & Election Security
    Government Accountability & Oversight

    The bill prevents federal compensation or refunds to January 6 defendants—saving and redirecting federal funds to Capitol operations and avoiding perceived rewards for unlawful participation—while denying potential remedies to wrongfully prosecuted or pardoned individuals and restricting judicial avenues for compensation.

    1. senate
  • Rhode Islandsenator·
  • Georgiarepresentative·
  • North Carolinarepresentative·
  • Californiarepresentative·
  • Californiarepresentative·
  • Arizonasenator·
Bill
  • house
  • president
  • 25 cosponsors·Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress January 6, 2026
    Sheldon Whitehouse
    S-3581Bill

    No Settlements for January 6 Law Enforcement Assaulters Act

    70%
    Sense of Congress
    Policing & Law Enforcement
    Government Accountability & Oversight

    The bill prioritizes saving federal settlement dollars and signaling accountability for assaults on officers from Jan 6 by blocking use of federal funds to settle those claims, but it also cuts off some paths to compensation, may shift or increase legal costs for agencies and taxpayers, and can prolong or complicate resolution of contested legal claims.

    1. senate
    2. house
    3. president
    24 cosponsors·Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress January 6, 2026
    Barry D. Loudermilk
    HRES-605Simple Resolution

    Establishing the Select Subcommittee to Investigate the Remaining Questions Surrounding January 6, 2021.

    75%
    Congressional Operations
    Government Accountability & Oversight
    Chamber Operations

    The bill creates a time‑limited, empowered congressional investigation to produce a public report on January 6, strengthening fact‑finding and record access, but it increases federal spending, imposes legal burdens on subpoenaed parties, and risks perceptions of partisan control that could undermine public trust.

    1. house
    Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress September 3, 2025
    Deborah K. Ross
    HR-7711Bill

    No Rewards for January 6 Rioters Act

    75%
    Sense of Congress
    Government Accountability & Oversight
    Congressional Operations

    The bill stops federal refunds to Jan. 6 defendants and redirects any recovered funds to the Architect of the Capitol—protecting taxpayers and strengthening penalties but limiting individuals' ability to obtain federal compensation or court-ordered relief and raising legal and budget process concerns.

    1. house
    2. senate
    3. president
    11 cosponsors·Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress February 25, 2026
    Norma Judith Torres
    HR-6954Bill

    January 6th Truth and Transparency Act

    70%
    Sense of Congress
    Government Accountability & Oversight
    Congressional Operations

    The bill increases federal transparency and oversight of post-pardon criminal activity and use-of-force encounters, improving accountability, but raises privacy and reputational risks for named individuals, may conflict with state rules or investigations, and imposes ongoing administrative costs.

    1. house
    2. senate
    3. president
    3 cosponsors·Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress January 6, 2026
    Norma Judith Torres
    HR-6952Bill

    January 6th Oral History Project Act

    50%
    Appropriations (General)
    Sense of Congress
    Congressional Operations
    $500K

    The bill centralizes and preserves January 6 firsthand materials and enables program funding through donations and a small appropriations baseline, improving access and historical recordkeeping while raising privacy, legal-use, bias-perception, and taxpayer-funding and administration concerns.

    1. house
    2. senate
    3. president
    3 cosponsors·Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress January 6, 2026
    Ruben Gallego
    S-4126Bill

    Address the ineligibility of Ashli Babbitt for military funeral honors.

    70%
    Military Personnel
    Government Accountability & Oversight
    Sense of Congress

    The bill prevents military honors for those tied to the January 6 attack to uphold legal and disciplinary standards, but it also creates a case-by-case congressional power that risks politicizing honors and upsetting families.

    1. senate
    2. house
    3. president
    Updated 6/12/2026·Last progress March 17, 2026