In God we trust
Fallen Servicemembers Religious Heritage Restoration Act
Calling on elected officials and civil society leaders to counter antisemitism and educate the public on the contributions of the Jewish American community.
The resolution elevates recognition, education, and attention to antisemitism—potentially improving inclusion and prompting protective measures—while remaining symbolic with no direct funding or enforcement and raising some free‑speech and spending concerns.
Calling on elected officials and civil society leaders to counter antisemitism and educate the public on the contributions of the Jewish-American community.
The resolution promotes public recognition, education, and veteran honor for Jewish Americans—which can reduce prejudice and improve campus protections—while imposing modest public costs and raising potential free-speech and administrative burdens for institutions.
To address the health of cancer survivors and unmet needs that survivors face through the entire continuum of care from diagnosis through active treatment and posttreatment, in order to improve survivorship, treatment, transition to recovery and beyond, quality of life and palliative care, and long-term health outcomes, including by developing a minimum standard of care for cancer survivorship, irrespective of the type of cancer, a survivor's background, or forthcoming survivorship needs, and for other purposes.
No Escaping Justice Act of 2026
The bill strengthens congressional oversight and national-security tools against foreign participants in Epstein-related trafficking and preserves victim protections, but it does so at the cost of added agency workloads, potential diplomatic friction, and expanded reputational and legal risks from broad definitions and naming/sanction authorities.
Fair Housing for Survivors Act of 2026
The bill strengthens legal protections and access to targeted housing supports for survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and trafficking — improving safety and remedies — but risks increasing compliance and enforcement costs, raising expectations that may not be matched with funding, and creating incentives for some housing providers to restrict rentals.
Jaime’s Law
The bill aims to reduce illegal access to ammunition and clarify dealer duties while preserving state control and banning a federal registry, but it increases paperwork, compliance costs, and criminalizes many private transfers—risks that could delay lawful purchases and disrupt rural and family practices.
Courtney Wild Reinforcing Crime Victims’ Rights Act
The bill strengthens and enforces victims' rights and access to support and remedies, but does so at the cost of added administrative burdens, potential delays and privacy/safety risks for victims, increased litigation, and some reputational risks for prosecutors.
Reducing Hereditary Cancer Act
The bill expands and clarifies Medicare coverage for hereditary‑cancer testing, high‑risk screening, and preventive surgeries—improving access and aligning care with clinical guidelines for high‑risk beneficiaries—while increasing federal costs and creating administrative complexity that may produce implementation challenges and some access tradeoffs.
To amend the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act to reauthorize certain programs, and for other purposes.
The bill secures multi-year funding and outreach that likely reduces drowning risks and gives the CPSC planning stability, at the cost of expanded spending authority and a risk of continued funding without strong performance oversight.