H.R. 1529 - Debt Limit Control and Accountability Act of 2017
- Sponsor:
- Mark Sanford
- Summary:
- To prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from using extraordinary measures to prevent the Government from reaching the statutory debt limit, or using extraordinary measures once such limit has been reached, and for other purposes. (by CRS)
- Status:
- The bill has been referred to committee.
Debt Limit Control and Accountability Act of 2017
H.R. 1529 — 115th Congress (2017–2018)
- Summary
- To prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from using extraordinary measures to prevent the Government from reaching the statutory debt limit, or using extraordinary measures once such limit has been reached, and for other purposes. (by CRS)
- Learn More
- At OpenCongress
- Title
- To prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from using extraordinary measures to prevent the Government from reaching the statutory debt limit, or using extraordinary measures once such limit has been reached, and for other purposes.
- Other Titles
- Debt Limit Control and Accountability Act of 2017
- Debt Limit Control and Accountability Act of 2017
- Debt Limit Control and Accountability Act of 2017
- Sponsor
- Mark Sanford
- Co-Sponsors
- Subjects
- Economics and public finance
- Budget deficits and national debt
- Employee benefits and pensions
- Financial services and investments
- Government employee pay, benefits, personnel management
- Government trust funds
- Health care costs and insurance
- Postal service
- Presidents and presidential powers, Vice Presidents
- Securities
- State and local finance
- Related Bills
- Major Actions
Introduced 3/15/2017 Referred to Committee - Bill History
-
There have been no votes on this bill.
Action Date Description Introduced 3/15/2017 3/15/2017 Introduced in House 3/15/2017 Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. Number Sponsor Date Offered Status
- chart
- table
Total contributions given to House members from Republican/Conservative, which…
support this bill
Republican/Conservative | $7,128,642 |
$7,128,642 |
Contributions data source: OpenSecrets.org