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HRES 1028

Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the United States must act urgently to end the political and economic dominance of billionaire oligarchs, halt the corporate subsidies and tax advantages that fortify their power, and reinvest in the needs of the American people to defend democracy from authoritarianism.

119th Congress Introduced by Pramila Jayapal and 3 co-sponsors

House resolution urges ending billionaire oligarch dominance by eliminating corporate subsidies and tax advantages while reinvesting in public needs to protect democracy.

Submitted in House
1
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HRES 1028

Legislative bill overview

HRES 1028 is a non-binding resolution expressing the House's position that the U.S. government should address billionaire wealth concentration, eliminate corporate subsidies and tax advantages, and redirect resources toward public needs as a defense against authoritarianism. The bill carries no legal force but signals the majority party's priorities to the executive branch and the public.

Why is this important

Resolutions like this shape the political conversation around wealth inequality and corporate taxation, potentially influencing future legislative priorities and budget negotiations. The bill's assignment to seven committees suggests broad policy implications spanning tax code, financial regulation, and social spending, indicating this reflects a coalition's effort to coordinate messaging across multiple policy domains.

Potential points of contention

  • Definition and scope: "Billionaire oligarchs" and "political dominance" lack precise legal definitions, making implementation ambiguous and vulnerable to partisan disagreement about which individuals or corporations are targeted
  • Economic effects debate: Critics argue eliminating corporate subsidies could reduce competitiveness and investment, while supporters contend these create inefficiencies; economists genuinely disagree on net effects
  • Authority concerns: Tax and subsidy policy requires specific legislation; a resolution cannot independently alter tax code, raising questions about enforcement mechanisms and whether this represents overreach beyond the resolution's scope

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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