119 HR 737

Extraordinary Measures Transparency Act

Congress119
ChamberHouse
TypeHR
Number737
Introduced2025-01-24
Cosponsors1

Latest Action

Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

2025-01-24

Read the Bill

Primary sources on Congress.gov:

Cosponsors (showing 1 of 1)

D · Davis, Donald G. (North Carolina)

Persona Takes on This Bill

Statement-vs-Vote Gap (Pressure Desk)

The War Powers flood and CFPB disapprovals are unified by a gap between public legislative urgency and zero structural path to passage — these are electoral record-building instruments being described as legislative pressure campaigns.

The gap I'm tracking today is between the volume of legislative language and the absence of any cross-aisle commitment. Nine War Powers resolutions in roughly three weeks — that is an extraordinary number of separately introduced instruments. Each introduction generates floor statements, press releases, constituent mailings, and earned media. Gottheimer's 119hconres75 even got a unanimous consent agreement that sounds like a breakthrough. But the UC agreement was structured so that the Republican committee chair holds the trigger. That gap — between the appearance of procedural progress and the reality of Republican gate-keeping — is the core deception in today's legislative record. Someone said 'we secured a path to the floor.' The record says that path has a Republican-controlled lock on it. The FEC data in this input does not include specific independent expenditure figures for named candidates in this cycle, so I cannot cite specific dollar flows anchoring this analysis — that's a gap I'll flag rather than paper over. What I can say is that the pattern of behavior here is consistent with a minority party building an electoral record rather than passing legislation. The sponsors — Gottheimer, Moulton, Jayapal, Huffman, Balint — span the Democratic ideological spectrum from center to progressive. That breadth is itself a signal: this is being built as a coalition document for 2026 campaign use, not a negotiated vehicle with majority-party buy-in. On the CFPB resolutions: Green and Beatty introducing disapprovals with zero cosponsors and no Republican engagement is the definition of a statement vote that will never happen. The CFPB rule withdrawals being targeted were controversial and drew industry lobbying; the silence of the financial services industry on these disapproval resolutions — no public opposition, no counter-mobilization — tells you exactly how threatened they are by these bills. They aren't. The market for these resolutions is the constituent newsletter, not the committee markup.

2026-05-13

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 737: Extraordinary Measures Transparency Act. Retrieved 2026-05-13, from https://apprised.news/bill/119hr737

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Chicago

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BibTeX

@misc{apprised_119_hr_737_extraordinary_measures_transp,
  title = {119 HR 737: Extraordinary Measures Transparency Act},
  publisher = {Apprised.news},
  url = {https://apprised.news/bill/119hr737},
  note = {Accessed 2026-05-13}
}