119 HR 4840

CREATE Act

Congress119
ChamberHouse
TypeHR
Number4840
Introduced2025-08-01
Cosponsors14

Latest Action

Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

2025-08-01

Read the Bill

Primary sources on Congress.gov:

Persona Takes on This Bill

Whip Count (Pressure Desk)

Nine War Powers resolutions and two CFPB disapprovals are unified by the same structural problem: zero Republican cosponsor support and majority-controlled procedural gates that will not open absent an unforeseen GOP defection.

Let me give you the vote math as it actually sits. The War Powers cluster has nine House concurrent resolutions and one that cleared a procedural hurdle — 119hconres75 — via a unanimous consent agreement. That UC agreement sounds significant until you read it: the resolution can be called up 'by the chair of the Committee on Foreign Affairs or his designee.' That chair is Rep. Mast, a Republican and a reliable ally of the White House on Iran posture. He has every incentive to let this sit. The UC agreement did not set a date; it created an option that the majority can decline to exercise indefinitely. That is not a path to the floor; it is a parking spot with a Republican-controlled meter. The cosponsor data confirms the ceiling. 119hconres93 has 11 cosponsors, 119hconres75 has 10, 119hconres86 has 4, 119hjres153 on Cuba has 11 — these are entirely Democratic rosters. There is not a single named Republican cosponsor on any Iran War Powers resolution in this dataset. A concurrent resolution requires majority votes in both chambers; in the House that means 218. Democrats hold roughly 213 seats. You need Republican defections, and right now the whip count shows zero committed crossover votes. The resolutions are messaging infrastructure, not legislative vehicles. The CFPB disapproval resolutions (119hjres160, 119hjres161) follow the same structural pattern: no cosponsors, referred to committee, no Republican sponsorship. The CRA disapproval mechanism can theoretically be expedited under Senate rules with 30 hours of debate and a simple majority, but only if the Senate Majority Leader schedules it — which he will not do for resolutions introduced by the minority. The calendar pressure is asymmetric: Democrats are building a record, not a vote count. The honest probability on any of these passing is in the low single digits unless the geopolitical situation produces a Republican fracture that no current whip count data supports.

2026-05-13

Historical Lenses on This Bill

Elizabeth I 1558-1603

Elizabeth I governed by prolonged ambiguity — refusing to commit to a definitive course of action until the cost of commitment fell below the cost of delay. Republican House leadership is deploying a structurally identical strategy on the War Powers resolutions: the UC agreement on 119hconres75 creates the appearance of openness while the scheduling trigger remains firmly in majority hands. The queen never said no; she said 'not yet.' House Republicans are saying precisely that on Iran war authority, and the strategy is working — Democrats are expending legislative credibility on vehicles that cannot move while the majority preserves optionality at zero cost.

William Randolph Hearst 1863-1951

Hearst understood that narrative volume, sustained long enough, creates its own political reality independent of the underlying facts. The nine Iran War Powers resolutions — each generating a press release, a floor statement, and constituent communications — are a Hearstian narrative strategy: the goal is not to pass a bill but to own the story. The gas price tracker resolution (119hconres90) is the purest expression of this instinct — a bill that is literally about making price data visible. The risk Hearst always faced, and that today's sponsors face, is that narrative pressure without a legislative conversion mechanism eventually produces fatigue rather than action.

Federal Agencies on This Bill

Posts from federal agencies in the last 24 hours that match this bill's identifier or title keywords. Grouped by voice class — executive framing carries the administration's perspective; regulators speak to implementation; oversight bodies aim for neutrality. Read across, not just within, a single voice class.

Executive branch (framing — read with awareness)

Press releases and statements from cabinet departments and the White House. These are the administration's own framing on the bill or its policy area, not neutral analysis.

Labor Department executive Sun, 10 Ma

Trump Administration proposes rule to expand access to fertility benefits with new legal pathway for employers to offer benefits directly to employees

WASHINGTON – The U.S. departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Treasury announced a proposed rule that would create a new category of limited excepted benefits to further expand the ability of employers to offer meaningful fertility benefits to their employees. T

Markets vs Bill

No directly-mapped prediction markets indexed yet for this bill's policy domain.
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APA

Apprised.news. (n.d.). 119 HR 4840: CREATE Act. Retrieved 2026-05-13, from https://apprised.news/bill/119hr4840

MLA

"119 HR 4840: CREATE Act." Apprised.news. Web. 2026-05-13. <https://apprised.news/bill/119hr4840>.

Chicago

"119 HR 4840: CREATE Act." Apprised.news. Accessed 2026-05-13. https://apprised.news/bill/119hr4840.

BibTeX

@misc{apprised_119_hr_4840_create_act,
  title = {119 HR 4840: CREATE Act},
  publisher = {Apprised.news},
  url = {https://apprised.news/bill/119hr4840},
  note = {Accessed 2026-05-13}
}