Friendship
To provide for reconciliation pursuant to title II of H. Con. Res. 14.
This package delivers sizable tax relief, defense/industrial and targeted domestic investments while tightening immigration and benefit rules and expanding fossil fuel development — producing near‑term financial and program gains for many Americans at the cost of higher federal spending, greater compliance burdens, and increased risks to climate, coverage, and immigrant access.
Establishing the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2025 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034.
This concurrent budget resolution offers a 10-year fiscal blueprint and tools to pursue up to $2 trillion in deficit reduction and policy changes—providing predictability for defense, health, research, and tax planning—while concentrating procedural power and risking cuts to benefits, reduced flexibility in crises, higher long‑term debt if offsets fail, and environmental and regulatory tradeoffs.
Directing the Clerk of the House of Representatives to make a correction in the engrossment of H.R. 1.
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide that overtime pay provided to certain border patrol agents is qualified overtime compensation.
To clarify that for purposes of Federal nondiscrimination requirements applicable to education programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance, discrimination prohibited under title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 is based on the biological reality of sex.
Fuel STAR Act of 2026
Nancy Gardner Sewell Medicare Multi-Cancer Early Detection Screening Coverage Act
The bill expands Medicare coverage and temporary payment stability for FDA-cleared multi-cancer blood tests, improving early-detection access for eligible seniors, but it also imposes age and frequency limits plus payment caps and coverage-uncertainty mechanisms that may delay access for younger beneficiaries and hinder availability and innovation.
To amend title 54, United States Code, to prohibit the acquisition of land, water, or an interest in land or water from a private landowner using amounts made available under the Land and Water Conservation Fund.
The bill favors keeping land under local/private ownership and promoting non‑purchase conservation, but in doing so restricts states' ability to acquire land with LWCF grants—potentially reducing conservation/park expansion, raising costs and delays, and creating administrative uncertainty.
To provide that the final rule of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service titled "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Endangered Species Status With Critical Habitat for Guadalupe Fatmucket, Texas Fatmucket, Guadalupe Orb, Texas Pimpleback, Balcones Spike, and False Spike, and Threatened Species Status With Section 4(d) Rule and Critical Habitat for Texas Fawnsfoot" shall have no force or effect.
The bill reduces federal regulatory and permitting burdens for local land and water uses in certain Texas watersheds, benefiting developers and local governments in the short term, but it removes federal protections and funding for six mussel species—raising extinction risk and threats to water quality and long-term community costs.
No FED in West Texas Act
This bill preserves local control and the current land‑use status quo for nearby landowners and officials but does so by blocking the 2023 refuge plan—delaying conservation actions, reducing federal support for refuge operations, and creating legal uncertainty.