Trump says he's "not satisfied" after Iran sends new proposal for talks
"Game of chicken" between U.S., Iran to continue for now, national security analyst says (cbsnews); Trump Says He’s ‘Not Satisfied’ With Iran’s Latest Proposal (nytimes)
↓ Why this is on ModernAction
3 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025.
HR1422 · 119th Congress
Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025
Where do you stand on this bill?
Takes about 60 seconds
About this bill
What HR1422 actually does
This story is about President Trump rejecting a Tehran peace proposal while gasoline and energy prices are rising and tensions with Iran are in the news. This bill would require the President to punish foreign people and companies that help Iran sell or process oil and gas by freezing U.S.-linked property and blocking visas.
If passed, it would:
- Authorize asset freezes for foreign firms aiding Iranian oil or gas sales • Block visas and U.S. entry for many targeted foreign individuals.
2 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about Trump rejecting an Iran proposal amid surging gas and energy prices and international disputes over Iranian oil. This bill would expand sanctions on more foreign people and companies that help Iran ship, finance, or sell oil, gas, and petrochemicals and create a federal working group to enforce them.
If passed, it would
- Freeze covered U.S.-linked property and block many transactions • Create a federal working group to improve sanctions enforcement and allied coordination.
This story is about iran delivering a revised proposal for negotiations with the U.S. while leaders expressed dissatisfaction. The bill would require the president to notify Congress and pause many sanction-relief actions, with a review window and a joint resolution needed for major policy changes.
If passed, it would
- Mandate congressional notification and a review window before easing Iran sanctions • Prevent larger sanction changes unless Congress passes a joint resolution.
