Supreme Court FTC removal ruling
Supreme Court judgment in Trump v. Slaughter, No. 25-332. Who can act: U.S. senators and representatives.
Supreme Court judgment in Trump v. Slaughter, No. 25-332
Who can act: U.S. senators and representatives
↓ Congress can act on this
6 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is HR1295: Reorganizing Government Act of 2025.
HR1295 · 119th Congress
Reorganizing Government Act of 2025
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What HR1295 actually does
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would revive expedited consideration of presidential reorganization plans.
If passed, it would:
- revive expedited consideration of presidential reorganization plans • remove prior prohibitions on plans abolishing or transferring independent regulatory agencies or their functions.
5 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would bar pay-for-delay deals that postpone generic or biosimilar entry.
If passed, it would
- bar pay-for-delay deals that postpone generic or biosimilar entry • strengthen competition in prescription-drug markets.
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would authorize the FTC to sue over sham citizen petitions used to delay generic or biosimilar competition.
If passed, it would
- authorize the FTC to sue over sham citizen petitions used to delay generic or biosimilar competition • add a specific enforcement tool tied to drug competition.
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would prohibit “product hopping” through an amendment to the FTC Act.
If passed, it would
- prohibit “product hopping” through an amendment to the FTC Act • strengthen FTC tools against anti-competitive pharmaceutical practices.
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would transfer antitrust enforcement from the FTC to the Department of Justice.
If passed, it would
- transfer antitrust enforcement from the FTC to the Department of Justice • leave Congress to redefine the FTC around other consumer-protection functions.
This story is about Research lead: Supreme Court FTC removal ruling. This bill would tighten merger standards and expand tools against exclusionary conduct.
If passed, it would
- tighten merger standards and expand tools against exclusionary conduct • enhance DOJ/FTC enforcement capacity and establish an FTC Office of the Competition Advocate.
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