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BillHR 9385 · 119

To prohibit entities integral to the national interests of the United States from participating in any foreign sustainability due diligence regulation, including the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive of the European Union, and for other purposes.

Introduced
Jun 22, 2026
Cosponsors
0
Traction
0
Last Action
Jun 22, 2026

Bill Summary

Prohibits US companies from following certain European Union rules about environmental and social responsibility. Bans US participation in the EU's Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive.

Sponsored By

Scott Fitzgerald
Republican · Wisconsin · House

Bill Journey

  1. Jun 22, 2026
  2. Jun 22, 2026You Are Here

    The committee will review the bill, debate amendments, and vote on whether to advance it to the full chamber.

  3. TBD

    The full chamber debates the bill, may amend it, and votes on whether to pass it.

  4. TBD

    If passed by the first chamber, the other chamber considers, may amend, and votes on the bill.

  5. TBD

    If passed by both chambers, the bill goes to the President to sign into law or veto.

Why It Matters

This bill affects US companies that operate in Europe, potentially exempting them from EU sustainability and social responsibility regulations. It may also impact European businesses that work with US companies, as they would no longer be required to follow the same sustainability rules.

Impact Areas

Sample
Addresses Supply
Targets an underlying shortage driving costs.
Supports Families
Aimed at easing pressure on working households.
Long-term Impact
Effects compound across multiple budget cycles.
Expands Access
Lowers barriers for first-time participants.

Support & Opposition

Sponsor & cosponsor support by party
1backer
  • Republican1
Cross-party cosponsors0 · 0%

Documents

1

Full text opens on congress.gov, the official source.

Bill Details

Bill TypeHouse Bill · Federal
Primary Topic
IntroducedJun 22, 2026
Last UpdatedJun 22, 2026
Latest ActionReferred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on the Judiciary, 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.

Summary and impact analysis written by Judy (KnowGov's enrichment AI). Bill metadata, status, sponsor, and any floor votes from Prism. Sections marked “Sample” are placeholders not yet connected to live data.