Labor omnia vincit
Hard work conquers all things
To amend the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 to ensure real-time public access to Federal award information.
The bill improves transparency and oversight by requiring near-real-time posting of federal awards, but it shifts costs and workload to agencies and raises the risk of rushed, inaccurate disclosures.
Protecting Life in Health Savings Accounts Act
The bill preserves tax‑favored account coverage for a narrow set of abortions (rape, incest, life‑threatening conditions) and clarifies tax rules, but broadly prohibits tax‑free use of those accounts for most abortions—shifting costs onto many women (especially low‑income people), raising employer/plan administrative burdens, and creating tax‑planning impacts.
No Abortion Coverage for Medicaid Act
The bill codifies Hyde-like limits on federal Medicaid funding for elective abortion and preserves narrow exceptions (rape, incest, life, certain pregnancy complications) while giving states clear authority, but it will reduce abortion access and increase costs and administrative burdens for low-income Medicaid enrollees and the systems that serve them.
UBER Act
Healthy SNAP Act of 2025
This bill shifts SNAP benefits toward more nutritious, culturally adaptable foods and requires periodic nutrition reviews — improving public-health orientation but limiting some participant choice, raising compliance costs for vendors, and creating administrative burdens.
Patriotism Not Pride Act
The bill prioritizes standardized federal displays and modest taxpayer savings by banning government-sponsored Pride promotions, while reducing visible recognition, outreach, and services for LGBTQI people and creating potential legal challenges.
Energy Freedom Act
The bill sharply simplifies the tax code and reduces federal tax expenditures by repealing many niche energy, fuel, vehicle, and efficiency credits after 2025, but the trade‑off is higher costs and weaker incentives for clean energy, fuels, vehicles, manufacturing, and infrastructure—slowing decarbonization, raising short‑ and long‑term costs for producers and many households, and creating transitional uncertainty.
DRIVE Act
The bill reduces regulatory costs and preserves operator control for heavy-vehicle owners but increases the risk of faster heavy-vehicle travel, which could raise crash rates, reduce fleet safety consistency, and shift greater long-term costs onto communities and taxpayers.
SNAP Reform and Upward Mobility Act of 2025
The bill improves measurement and transparency of poverty and SNAP outcomes—potentially leading to better-targeted policy—while raising privacy, administrative, and food-security risks that could harm low-income households and strain state budgets.
Quapaw Tribal Settlement Act of 2025
The bill delivers a substantial settlement to Quapaw Nation claimants while prioritizing mediation and providing administrative backstops to ensure timely distribution, but it shifts costs to taxpayers and recipients, and can substitute federal allocation authority if mediation fails, which may limit claimant control and increase DOI administrative burdens.