Liberty and Prosperity
Expanding Access to High-Impact Tutoring Act of 2025
The bill funds and standardizes a major expansion of federally supported, evidence‑based tutoring and workforce development to accelerate student recovery—especially in high‑need schools—but does so with open‑ended federal spending, significant new administrative and local cost burdens, and rigid requirements that may reduce local flexibility and produce uneven rollout.
Brownfields Redevelopment Tax Incentive Reauthorization Act of 2025
The bill keeps immediate expensing for environmental cleanup before 2025 and after 2028—helping taxpayers and encouraging remediation in those periods—but creates a 2025–2028 gap that raises tax bills and reduces cash flow for those who pay remediation costs in that interval and may deter cleanup work then.
Improving Federal Assistance to Families Act
The bill would make poverty measurement more accurate and better target aid—especially in high-cost areas—benefiting many low-income families, but it would raise program costs, add administrative burdens, and risk inconsistent or politically contested eligibility outcomes.
REDUCE Food Prices Act
The bill redirects and concentrates tax incentives to encourage small food retailers and new grocery openings in underserved counties—improving local food access and near-term cash flow for some businesses—while narrowing eligibility, reducing several tax benefits for many small food retailers, adding administrative complexity, and producing mixed effects on federal revenue.
Patient Device Data Access Act of 2025
The bill strengthens patients' enforceable access to device-collected health data and transparency about data use—improving safety and accountability—but creates compliance costs, technical and equity barriers to access, and potential legal disputes for manufacturers.
_______ Act of 2024
The bill strengthens state control and civil‑liberty protections by clarifying governors’ consent and Posse Comitatus limits for Guard activations, at the cost of potentially slowing federal emergency responses and increasing federal‑state coordination friction.
Auto Theft Prevention Act
The bill channels federal grants to expand local and state capacity to investigate and reduce auto theft—likely improving recoveries and relieving some local budget pressure—while raising federal spending and risks of privacy harms, unequal access for smaller or Tribal jurisdictions, and a heavier emphasis on policing rather than non‑policing solutions.
Expanding Labor Representation in the Workforce System Act
The bill increases states' flexibility to concentrate WIOA funding and expands formal recognition of labor organizations — improving access and administrative clarity for some workers and unions, while risking reduced resources for other participants, greater employer obligations, and legal/administrative uncertainty.
Child Care for Every Community Act
The bill would dramatically expand affordable, higher‑quality child care and strengthen the early childhood workforce and supports—especially for disadvantaged and Tribal communities—but does so through large federal spending, stronger federal control and standards, and new costs and administrative burdens that could strain small providers and state budgets.
INCREASE Housing Affordability Act
The bill incentivizes reuse of vacant commercial buildings to produce more housing—including affordable units—by pairing a federal tax credit with technical assistance, but it raises federal costs, adds administrative complexity, and may favor larger developers over smaller ones.