The bill cancels previously enacted reconciliation changes—halting their implementation and any associated spending or regulatory shifts—but in doing so it creates administrative/legal uncertainty for affected parties and may remove expected benefits for low‑income Americans.
None identified in the provided sections.
Low‑income individuals: lose new or expected benefits that would have been created or expanded by the repealed reconciliation provisions.
Individuals and entities that began relying on the changes in Sections 10101–0108: face legal and administrative uncertainty when the law is returned to its prior text.
Taxpayers: the repeal prevents the ongoing effects of the reconciliation provisions, stopping any potential new spending or regulatory changes those sections would have produced (which may be viewed negatively or positively by different stakeholders).
Based on analysis of 2 sections of legislative text.
Repeals Sections 10101–10108 of a prior reconciliation law and restores prior statutory text as if those provisions were never enacted.
Introduced November 18, 2025 by Jahana Hayes · Last progress November 18, 2025
Repeals Sections 10101 through 10108 of a prior reconciliation act and restores the law that those sections amended, treating the repealed provisions as if they were never enacted. The bill contains only a short title (naming the Act) and the repeal; it does not create new programs, appropriate funds, or set implementation deadlines.