Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, 2026
Summary
What This Bill Does
Provides fiscal year 2026 Legislative Branch appropriations and policy riders governing Senate office-account availability, Capitol Police mutual-aid transfers, Architect of the Capitol contractor incentives, Library of Congress reimbursable activity authority, private vehicle expenses, fund availability, Legislative Branch Financial Managers Council expenses, interagency transfers, Capitol tours, Huawei and ZTE telecommunications purchases, computer-network content blocking, accessible food service coordination, and $18.5 million in additional Senate Sergeant at Arms funding including $15 million for enhanced Member security.
Who Benefits and How
Senate offices benefit because official personnel and office expense account amounts remain available under the bill's terms. Capitol Police benefit from authority to transfer up to $10 million to mutual-aid reimbursements. Members of Congress benefit from $15 million for enhanced Member security through the Senate Sergeant at Arms. The Library of Congress benefits from continued reimbursable activity authority capped at $332.285 million. Legislative branch financial managers benefit from administrative expense authority for the Legislative Branch Financial Managers Council. Capitol visitors benefit because funds cannot be used to eliminate or restrict employee-led guided Capitol tours. People with disabilities benefit because legislative branch food service offices must coordinate with providers and disability advocacy organizations.
Who Bears the Burden and How
The Architect of the Capitol cannot use funds for incentive or award payments to contractors behind schedule or over budget. Legislative branch entities must follow restrictions on private vehicle maintenance, fiscal year availability, transfers to other federal entities, Huawei or ZTE telecommunications purchases, and computer networks that fail to block pornography. Food service contractors and legislative branch offices must confer on accessibility and disability accommodations. Federal taxpayers fund the legislative branch appropriations and the additional Senate security amount.
Key Provisions
- Provides Legislative Branch fiscal year 2026 appropriations.
- Makes Senate official personnel and office expense account amounts available under section 101.
- Authorizes up to $10 million for Capitol Police mutual-aid reimbursements.
- Bars Architect of the Capitol contractor incentive payments for late or over-budget work.
- Caps Library of Congress reimbursable activities at $332.285 million.
- Restricts private vehicle expenses, carryover availability, and transfers outside the legislative branch.
- Protects employee-led guided Capitol tours.
- Bars Huawei and ZTE telecommunications equipment purchases and requires network pornography blocking.
- Requires food service coordination with disability advocacy organizations.
- Appropriates $18.5 million for the Senate Sergeant at Arms, including $15 million for enhanced Member security.
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
Provides fiscal year 2026 Legislative Branch appropriations and policy riders governing Senate office-account availability, Capitol Police mutual-aid transfers, Architect of the Capitol contractor incentives, Library of Congress reimbursable activity authority, private vehicle expenses, fund availability, Legislative Branch Financial Managers Council expenses, interagency transfers, Capitol tours, Huawei and ZTE telecommunications purchases, computer-network content blocking, accessible food service coordination, and $18.5 million in additional Senate Sergeant at Arms funding including $15 million for enhanced Member security.
Key Policy Areas
Appropriations, Legislative Branch, Capitol Security, Congressional Operations
Primary Purpose
Provides fiscal year 2026 Legislative Branch appropriations and policy riders governing Senate office-account availability, Capitol Police mutual-aid transfers, Architect of the Capitol contractor incentives, Library of Congress reimbursable activity authority, private vehicle expenses, fund availability, Legislative Branch Financial Managers Council expenses, interagency transfers, Capitol tours, Huawei and ZTE telecommunications purchases, computer-network content blocking, accessible food service coordination, and $18.5 million in additional Senate Sergeant at Arms funding including $15 million for enhanced Member security.
Policy Domains
House resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Senate offices
- Senate employees
- Capitol Police
- Members of Congress
- Library of Congress
- Legislative branch financial managers
- Capitol visitors
- People with disabilities
- Disability advocacy organizations
- Congressional committees
Identified Costs
- Architect of the Capitol
- Legislative branch entities
- Food service contractors
- Food service providers
- Telecommunications contractors
- Huawei Technologies Company
- ZTE Corporation
- Federal taxpayers
Legislative Progress
ReportedPlaced on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. …
Committee on Appropriations. Original measure reported to Senate by Senator …
Mr. Mullin, from the Committee on Appropriations, reported the following …
Introduced in Senate
Subcommittee on Legislative Branch. Hearings held on the subject prior …
Subcommittee on Legislative Branch. Hearings held on the subject prior …
Subcommittee on Legislative Branch. Hearings held on the subject prior …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Agency employees, Architect of the Capitol, Congressional employees leading tours
Taxpayers faces effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: Congressional employees leading tours, Legislative branch agencies, Legislative branch financial managers, Library of Congress, Members of Congress, Senate Sergeant at Arms, Senate offices
Negative-direction: Agency employees, Architect of the Capitol, Legislative branch entities, Legislative branch offices, Library of Congress budget staff, Senate disbursing offices
Capitol Police, Capitol Police budget staff, Mutual aid law enforcement agencies
Positive-direction: Capitol Police, Mutual aid law enforcement agencies
Negative-direction: Capitol Police budget staff
Huawei Technologies Company, ZTE Corporation
Disability advocacy organizations, People with disabilities
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "sergeant"
- → Senate Sergeant at Arms
- "architect"
- → Architect of the Capitol
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