S3229-119

In Committee

No Tariffs on Groceries Act of 2025

119th Congress Introduced Nov 20, 2025

Analysis under review: This bill has generated analysis that may be too generic or incomplete. Clause-level evidence remains available below.

Summary

What This Bill Does

Bars the President from imposing food tariffs or tariff-rate quotas without a joint resolution of congressional approval, while preserving existing antidumping and countervailing duty authorities.

Who Benefits and How

Grocers, food suppliers, and consumers could face fewer sudden tariff-driven price increases on food and related agricultural inputs.

Who Bears the Burden and How

The executive branch would lose unilateral flexibility to impose food tariffs and would need congressional approval first.

Key Provisions

  • Prohibits presidential food tariffs and tariff-rate quotas absent congressional approval.
  • Creates a joint resolution approval process for proposed food tariffs.
  • Defines covered food articles broadly to include food, feed ingredients, agricultural commodities, packaging, seeds, fertilizers, and related inputs.

Evidence Chain:

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

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Bars the President from imposing food tariffs or tariff-rate quotas without a joint resolution of congressional approval, while preserving existing antidumping and countervailing duty authorities.

Key Policy Areas

Trade, Food, Government Operations

Primary Purpose

Bars the President from imposing food tariffs or tariff-rate quotas without a joint resolution of congressional approval, while preserving existing antidumping and countervailing duty authorities.

Policy Domains

Trade Food Government Operations

Main Provisions

Identified Gains
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • Food importers, grocers, and consumers exposed to food tariff costs
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: is

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Identified Costs
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • Executive branch trade decisionmakers
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: is

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Nov 20, 2025

Ms. Rosen introduced the following bill; which was read twice …

Nov 20, 2025

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.

Nov 20, 2025

Introduced in Senate

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

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

Grocery Stores
1 mention across 1 clause
+1 positive

Grocers and food retailers exposed to import-related price increases

2/2
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Trade Food Government Operations

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