HR6637-119

In Committee

To advance bipartisan priorities.

119th Congress Introduced Dec 11, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill is a large cross-domain package built around the MARKET CHOICE Act structure. It creates a federal greenhouse-gas tax beginning in 2027 at $35 per metric ton of carbon dioxide equivalent on fossil fuels produced in or imported into the United States, with annual increases tied to five percentage points plus CPI growth. It also taxes covered industrial-process emissions, product-use emissions, and biomass-related emissions; directs EPA, Treasury, and Energy to calculate taxable emissions; provides phased credits for state greenhouse-gas payments; and imposes triple-tax penalties for nonpayment. A border greenhouse-gas adjustment title charges covered imports and rebates taxes on exports to address carbon leakage. The RISE Trust Fund receives 75 percent of carbon-tax receipts and allocates resources from 2027 through 2036 to highways, weatherization, displaced energy workers, airports, underground storage cleanup, abandoned mine reclamation, coastal flooding mitigation, ARPA-E, carbon capture research, energy storage, low-income household grants, reforestation, conservation, and related programs. Other provisions repeal federal motor vehicle and aviation fuel taxes after 2025, modify advanced coal project credits, limit some EPA Clean Air Act greenhouse-gas regulation once emissions are taxed, create chronic flooding grants, create displaced energy-worker assistance, establish a National Climate Commission, add National Cancer Institute funding and cancer drug-shortage reporting, create a fiscal commission, restrict House Member ownership or trading of covered financial instruments, expand anti-trafficking financial controls, authorize school-door security grants and emergency-response procedures, require unaffiliated-voter primary access, condition election funding on noncitizen-voting restrictions, require a Ukraine intelligence-sharing review, and repeal the special VA disciplinary process.

Who Benefits and How

Highway Trust Fund programs benefit because 70 percent of RISE Trust Fund resources flow to highways from 2027 through 2036. Low-income households benefit from state grants and energy-assistance allocations tied to carbon-tax receipts. Domestic manufacturers and exporters benefit from border adjustments and rebates designed to prevent carbon leakage. Carbon capture researchers, ARPA-E projects, energy-storage programs, and conservation programs benefit from dedicated RISE allocations. Displaced energy workers benefit from retraining, relocation, health benefits, early retirement support, and redevelopment assistance. Coastal communities benefit from chronic flooding mitigation and adaptation infrastructure funding. National Cancer Institute programs benefit from added appropriations. VA employees benefit from repeal of the special disciplinary process. Unaffiliated voters benefit from federal primary access rules.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Fossil fuel producers, fuel importers, industrial facilities, covered product manufacturers, and importers of covered goods must calculate emissions, pay taxes or border adjustments, keep records, and face triple-tax penalties for nonpayment. EPA, Treasury, Customs and Border Protection, Energy, Transportation, HHS, VA, election agencies, and other federal staff must write rules, administer credits and rebates, allocate trust-fund money, review applications, enforce funding conditions, and report to Congress. States receiving household, election, flooding, or conservation funds must meet program requirements and submit reports. House Members must avoid or divest covered financial instruments and certify compliance. Financial institutions face enhanced anti-money-laundering scrutiny for trafficking transactions. Federal taxpayers and consumers may bear administrative costs and price effects from the tax and compliance system.

Key Provisions

  • Establishes a federal greenhouse-gas tax starting at $35 per metric ton in 2027 with annual CPI-linked increases.
  • Requires industrial-process, product-use, biomass, emissions-calculation, state-payment credit, penalty, and sequestration-refund rules.
  • Creates border greenhouse-gas adjustments for covered imports and export rebates for covered goods.
  • Establishes the RISE Trust Fund and allocates carbon-tax receipts to highways, weatherization, workers, airports, cleanup, flooding, energy research, household aid, and conservation.
  • Repeals federal motor vehicle and aviation fuel taxes after 2025 and limits some Clean Air Act greenhouse-gas regulation for taxed emissions.
  • Authorizes flooding grants, displaced energy-worker assistance, climate and fiscal commissions, cancer funding, House trading restrictions, anti-trafficking finance controls, school safety grants, election funding conditions, Ukraine intelligence review, and VA disciplinary-process repeal.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Combines a MARKET CHOICE greenhouse-gas tax and border-adjustment package with RISE Trust Fund spending, fuel-tax repeal, Clean Air Act greenhouse-gas limits, climate and fiscal commissions, cancer funding, ethics and anti-trafficking finance rules, school safety and election provisions, Ukraine intelligence review, and repeal of the special VA disciplinary process.

Key Policy Areas

Tax, Climate, Infrastructure, Trade, Energy, Transportation, Health Care, Elections, Veterans, Financial Regulation

Primary Purpose

Combines a MARKET CHOICE greenhouse-gas tax and border-adjustment package with RISE Trust Fund spending, fuel-tax repeal, Clean Air Act greenhouse-gas limits, climate and fiscal commissions, cancer funding, ethics and anti-trafficking finance rules, school safety and election provisions, Ukraine intelligence review, and repeal of the special VA disciplinary process.

Policy Domains

Tax Climate Infrastructure Trade Energy Transportation Health Care Elections Veterans Financial Regulation

Substantive provisions

Identified Gains
  • Highway Trust Fund programs
  • Low-income households
  • Domestic manufacturers
  • Exporters
  • Carbon capture researchers
  • Displaced energy workers
  • Coastal communities
  • National Cancer Institute programs
  • VA employees
  • Unaffiliated voters
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
Exporters: , , , , ,
VA employees: , , , , ,
Coastal communities: , , , , ,
Unaffiliated voters: , , , , ,
Low-income households: , , , , ,
Domestic manufacturers: , , , , ,
Displaced energy workers: , , , , ,
Carbon capture researchers: , , , , ,
Highway Trust Fund programs: , , , , ,
National Cancer Institute programs: , , , , ,
Identified Costs
  • Fossil fuel producers
  • Fuel importers
  • Industrial facilities
  • Covered product manufacturers
  • Covered goods importers
  • EPA staff
  • Treasury administrators
  • Customs officials
  • State grant agencies
  • House Members
  • Financial institutions
  • Federal taxpayers
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
EPA staff: , , , , ,
House Members: , , , , ,
Fuel importers: , , , , ,
Customs officials: , , , , ,
Federal taxpayers: , , , , ,
State grant agencies: , , , , ,
Fossil fuel producers: , , , , ,
Industrial facilities: , , , , ,
Financial institutions: , , , , ,
Covered goods importers: , , , , ,
Treasury administrators: , , , , ,
Covered product manufacturers: , , , , ,

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Jan 15, 2026

Referred to the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

Dec 11, 2025

Mr. Fitzpatrick introduced the following bill; which was referred to …

Dec 11, 2025

Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in …

Dec 11, 2025

Introduced in House

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Government
20 mentions across 20 clauses
+4 positive -16 negative

Congress and other federal officials responsible for establishing the National Bipartisan Fiscal Commission, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency officials convening the school door advisory committee, Department of Labor

Positive-direction: Infrastructure and climate programs funded through the RISE Trust Fund, National Climate Commission operations financed by donations and appropriations, State governments retaining authority under their own laws despite the federal title, State, local, and Tribal governments receiving flooding mitigation infrastructure grants

Negative-direction: Congress and other federal officials responsible for establishing the National Bipartisan Fiscal Commission, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency officials convening the school door advisory committee, Department of Labor, Environmental Protection Agency officials developing taxable emissions methodologies, Executive branch agencies required to furnish information to the National Climate Commission, Executive branch officials preparing and transmitting foreign-country greenhouse gas notifications, Federal officials responsible for creating and supporting the National Climate Commission, Federal transportation trust fund revenues tied to repealed motor fuel and aviation fuel taxes, Foreign governments evaluated under the trafficking minimum standards, Health and Human Services and FDA officials conducting the cancer drug shortage study and report, Intelligence community and Defense officials conducting the review of intelligence sharing with Ukraine, National Climate Commission members and staff performing goal-setting and assessment duties, State election officials required to change primary-election and voter-information practices, State election systems subject to the noncitizen-voting prohibition and federal funding condition, The President and Congress carrying out the fiscal commission implementation and expedited consideration process, Treasury and Customs officials administering the border greenhouse gas adjustment rules

Manufacturing
7 mentions across 7 clauses
+1 positive -6 negative

Entities failing to comply with the greenhouse gas tax requirements, Importers of greenhouse gas intensive products subject to border adjustments, Importers paying the border greenhouse gas adjustment

Positive-direction: Taxpayers receiving credits for state greenhouse gas payments

Negative-direction: Entities failing to comply with the greenhouse gas tax requirements, Importers of greenhouse gas intensive products subject to border adjustments, Importers paying the border greenhouse gas adjustment, Industrial facilities and manufacturers subject to the new greenhouse gas tax subtitle, Industrial source categories subject to the greenhouse gas emissions tax, Manufacturers and importers of covered products subject to the greenhouse gas emissions tax

General Public
4 mentions across 4 clauses
+4 positive

Communities vulnerable to frequent and chronic flooding, Displaced workers in the energy sector receiving transition assistance, Low-income households

Oil & Gas
4 mentions across 4 clauses
+2 positive -2 negative

Fossil fuel producers and importers paying the combustion greenhouse gas tax, Fossil fuel producers and importers subject to the new greenhouse gas tax subtitle, Fossil fuel producers and users benefiting from limits on post-tax greenhouse gas regulation

Positive-direction: Fossil fuel producers and users benefiting from limits on post-tax greenhouse gas regulation, Fossil fuel producers and users benefiting from the greenhouse gas regulatory moratorium

Negative-direction: Fossil fuel producers and importers paying the combustion greenhouse gas tax, Fossil fuel producers and importers subject to the new greenhouse gas tax subtitle

Education
4 mentions across 2 clauses
+2 positive -2 negative

Local educational agencies required to develop and implement emergency response and parental notification procedures, Local educational agencies required to implement emergency response and parental notification procedures, Students, faculty, staff, parents, and guardians covered by school emergency response procedures

Positive-direction: Students, faculty, staff, parents, and guardians covered by school emergency response procedures

Negative-direction: Local educational agencies required to develop and implement emergency response and parental notification procedures, Local educational agencies required to implement emergency response and parental notification procedures

Transportation
3 mentions across 2 clauses
+3 positive

Airlines and other purchasers of aviation fuel affected by the repeal, Airport and Airway Trust Fund, Highway Trust Fund programs

State & Local Government
2 mentions across 1 clause
+1 positive -1 negative

Coastal communities, State grant administrators

Positive-direction: Coastal communities

Negative-direction: State grant administrators

Mining
2 mentions across 2 clauses
+1 positive -1 negative

Coal producers and coal importers paying the combustion greenhouse gas tax, Qualifying advanced coal project sponsors seeking credit reallocations

Positive-direction: Qualifying advanced coal project sponsors seeking credit reallocations

Negative-direction: Coal producers and coal importers paying the combustion greenhouse gas tax

43/55
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Tax Climate Infrastructure Trade Energy Transportation Health Care Elections Veterans Financial Regulation
Actor Mappings
"CBP"
→ Customs and Border Protection
"EPA"
→ Environmental Protection Agency
"Treasury"
→ Department of the Treasury
"RISE Trust Fund"
→ Trust fund receiving 75 percent of carbon-tax receipts

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

2 terms
"" §border adjustment

"" §greenhouse-gas tax

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology