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H.R. 374 House Real Bill Referred to Committee 118th Congress

Abolish the ATF Act

Because Who Needs a Dedicated Agency for Explosives?

Legislative Progress Introduced Jan 17, 2023
House Origin → Both Chambers → President
House (origin)
Introduced
2
Committee
3
Passed House
Senate
4
Received in Senate
5
Committee
6
Passed Senate
President
President
Absurdity Index
7/10
7-8Hold My Gavel

Would dissolve the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives entirely and transfer its remaining functions to the FBI. Because apparently alcohol, tobacco, firearms, AND explosives don't need their own agency.

Sponsor
Matt Gaetz R
Committee
Committee on the Judiciary
Introduced
Jan 17, 2023
Category
Government Reform

Party Balance

R
Primary Sponsor Matt Gaetz
Republican
Cosponsors (22 total)
R:5

Key Milestones

3 total actions

Introduced in House.

Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Estimated Taxpayer Cost

$158,316

~2 hours of congressional session time at $79,158/hour

(535 members × $174k salary ÷ 147 session days ÷ 8 hours)

Simplified estimate based on salary costs only. Actual costs include staff, facilities, and lost productivity.

Satire notice: Spending figures, pork tracking, and editorial commentary below are satirical estimates for entertainment purposes. They are not official government cost analyses. Legislative history and vote records are real — verify at Congress.gov .

Pork Barrel Meter
$0
$0$100B$1T+
"Squeaky Clean"

Satirical estimate for entertainment purposes

Watch the Sausage Get Made

See how this bill transformed through 3 stages of the legislative process.

Deep Dive

Official CRS Summary

Abolish the ATF Act - Abolishes the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. Transfers ATF investigative functions to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Winds down regulatory and administrative functions.

Read full summary on Congress.gov
All Legislative Actions 3
Introduced in House.
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Congress ended without action on this bill.
Related Bills 2
H.R. 3960

Defund the ATF Act

Related
H.R. 1095

Abolish the ATF Act

Related
Text Versions 1
Introduced in House

Congressional Research Service Summary

The Abolish the ATF Act would eliminate the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as a federal agency. Its law enforcement functions would be transferred to the FBI, and its regulatory functions related to firearms and explosives would be wound down.

Bill Details

The ATF has been a lightning rod for controversy since the Waco siege in 1993. This bill represents the most direct legislative response: simply dissolving the agency. Any ongoing criminal investigations would transfer to the FBI, and employees could apply for positions at the receiving agency.

The bill attracted 22 cosponsors, all Republicans, reflecting a significant caucus of lawmakers who view the ATF’s regulatory activities — particularly regarding firearms — as federal overreach. Critics of the bill argue that the ATF’s specialized expertise in firearms trafficking, arson investigation, and explosives regulation would be diluted or lost within the larger FBI bureaucracy. The bill did not advance past committee.

Source: This is a real bill introduced in the 118th Congress. View on Congress.gov.

Disclaimer: The absurdity score and editorial commentary above represent this site’s opinion. Bill details should be verified at Congress.gov.

This page is satirical commentary by AbsurdityIndex.org. Legislative history comes from public congressional records; spending estimates and "pork" figures are editorial and may not reflect official cost analyses. Absurdity scores are subjective editorial ratings. Verify all claims at Congress.gov