To amend title 5, United States Code, to authorize the increase of the retirement age in the United States Capitol Police.
Expanding WKSI Eligibility Act
The bill makes it easier and faster for many mid-size public companies to access capital and adds a modest transparency requirement for withdrawn WKSI ineligibility requests, at the cost of increased potential systemic and investor risk and some added SEC administrative expense.
Requiring each Member, officer, and employee of the House of Representatives to complete a program of training in workplace rights and responsibilities each session of each Congress, and for other purposes.
The bill extends consistent anti-harassment training and formalized accountability across the House — improving protections (including for interns) — at the cost of recurring time commitments for Members and staff and added administrative expenses and potential scheduling burdens for short-term trainees.
Permitting official photographs of the House of Representatives to be taken while the House is in actual session on a date designated by the Speaker.
Providing for the expenses of certain committees of the House of Representatives in the One Hundred Nineteenth Congress.
The resolution provides clearer, predictable committee budgets and centralized oversight (helping planning and consistency) at the cost of concentrating control and risking staff/program cuts, administrative delays, and potential shifts in taxpayer costs.
Electing Members to the Joint Committee of Congress on the Library and the Joint Committee on Printing.
The resolution clarifies committee leadership so congressional committees can start work immediately, improving legislative and oversight functioning with minimal apparent downside.
Preventing Foreign Interference in American Elections Act
Campaign Finance Transparency Act
Fair Air Standards Act
Protecting Americans’ Retirement Savings From Politics Act
The bill increases transparency and creates clearer, issuer-friendly guardrails for SEC rulemaking and proxy voting — improving procedural clarity and certain investor controls while trading off broader disclosure powers, raising compliance costs, and narrowing stewardship and market competition, with those costs likely borne by investors.