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H.R. 7315 House Real Bill Referred to the Committee on Ways and... 119th Congress

Advancing Policy Priorities Act

A Four-Title Grab Bag Referred to 21 Committees

Legislative Progress Introduced Feb 2, 2026
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
9/10
9-10Fish on Meth
The Gist
Fish on Meth

Congress just introduced a bill so ambitious—or so confused—that it got referred to 21 committees in the House on the same day. The bill itself is a legislative grab bag spanning agriculture, veterans' apprenticeships, federal employee disability retirement, and a sweeping overhaul of retirement savings rules. It's the legislative equivalent of cramming four separate bills into a trench coat and hoping no one notices.

Why It Matters

This bill touches everything from automatic 401(k) enrollment and student loan matching to veterans' apprenticeship programs and livestock reporting deadlines. The sheer breadth explains the 21-committee referral—every committee gets a slice because the bill spans their jurisdictions. It's a preview of how Congress processes omnibus legislation: shotgun it to every office and hope the committees sort it out later. Whether any of these provisions survive the committee gauntlet is another question entirely.

Sponsor
Magaziner, Seth [D-RI-2] D
Committee
Ways and Means Committee
Introduced
Feb 2, 2026
Category
Finance and Financial Sector

Party Balance

D
Primary Sponsor Magaziner, Seth [D-RI-2]
Democrat

No cosponsors on this bill

Key Milestones

2 total actions

Introduced in House

Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committees on Veterans' Affairs, Armed Services, ...

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 2 stages of the legislative process.

Deep Dive

Official CRS Summary

Advancing Policy Priorities Act. This bill combines multiple policy areas into a single package. It extends livestock mandatory reporting requirements, directs the Department of Defense and Department of Labor to support veteran apprenticeships, reforms federal employee disability retirement for line-of-duty injuries, and makes broad changes to retirement savings rules (including automatic enrollment, expanded credits for small employers, student loan payment matching, and catch-up contribution updates).

Read full summary on Congress.gov
All Legislative Actions 2
Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committees on Veterans' Affairs, Armed Services, Energy and Commerce, Transportation and Infrastructure, Financial Services, Education and Workforce, Oversight and Government Reform, Foreign Affairs, Agriculture, Natural Resources, Small Business, Science, Space, and Technology, the Judiciary, Homeland Security, Intelligence (Permanent Select), House Administration, Rules, Ethics, the Budget, and Appropriations, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Introduced in House
Related Bills 1
HR 185

Responsible Legislating Act

Related bill
Text Versions 1
Introduced in House

The Process

H.R. 7315 was referred to the Committee on Ways and Means on February 2, 2026—and also simultaneously referred to 20 other committees (21 total), which is what happens when a single bill tries to reform agriculture, veterans’ programs, federal retirement, and private retirement savings all at once. Each committee gets jurisdiction over the provisions that fall within its domain. As of now, it remains in committee limbo, waiting for the Speaker to determine how long each committee gets to consider it, which is itself a decision that apparently hasn’t been made.

The Fine Print

The bill text is publicly available, and it’s a doozy. Title I extends livestock mandatory reporting. Title II requires the DoD and Department of Labor to help veterans find apprenticeships. Title III overhauls disability retirement for federal employees injured in the line of duty. Title IV is the heavyweight: a sweeping set of retirement savings reforms including automatic 401(k) enrollment, enhanced small-employer tax credits, student loan payment matching, expanded catch-up contributions for ages 62–64, and new rules for part-time workers, military spouses, and pooled employer plans. No CRS summary exists yet, which—given the bill spans 20+ committees’ jurisdictions—is either a staffing problem or a quiet admission that summarizing this thing is its own full-time job.

Source: Real bill from the 119th 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