
Pick one or more. We'll use your choices and the connected bills to help you send a message to your elected officials.
Answer the policy questions below or skip any that don't fit your view. We use only your answers and the bills they connect to for your message.
1 bill on this topic
“The U.S. government should not be able to keep paying the World Health Organization through older laws, agreements, or other legal authorities once the funding cutoff applies.”
2 bills on this topic
“U.S. representatives at major international development banks should push those banks to cut climate pollution and favor help for countries and organizations building cleaner, more sustainable energy systems.”
2 bills on this topic
“U.S. representatives at major development banks should push those banks to stop funding gas or diesel passenger cars and buses by 2027, while considering communities that still need reliable transportation.”
2 bills on this topic
“The Treasury Department should calculate each year how much each major development bank spends on new fossil fuel capacity and report to Congress on fossil-fuel-related investments and assistance while U.S. money is being held back.”
2 bills on this topic
“U.S. representatives at major development banks should vote against bank policies, loans, investments, or other help that add coal, oil, or gas capacity, keep fossil fuel systems running longer, or require more fossil fuel capacity in another country.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should not spend U.S. government money to build, run, or support the U.N. Development Programme's iVerify tool or other efforts that label speech as misinformation, disinformation, or malinformation.”
1 bill on this topic
“Overseas fossil fuel limits should cover a broad range of coal, oil, gas, and related fuel work, including finding, producing, moving, burning, selling, processing, and refining both common and unconventional fossil fuels.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. money should not go to UNRWA, which serves Palestinian refugees, or to the UN Human Rights Council.”
1 bill on this topic
“The U.S. government should have to stop required dues and optional WHO program payments as soon as the funding cutoff is adopted, without extra time to phase out ongoing payments.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. foreign affairs money should not go to the Green Climate Fund, Clean Technology Fund, Loss and Damages Fund, or work carrying out the Paris climate agreement, and GAO should study how past climate spending affected global temperatures.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. representatives at world lending banks should push borrowing countries to investigate and punish fraud and corruption, encourage disclosure of who owns private companies receiving funds, and support larger bank funding bases only after budget, reform, mission, and voting-power tests are met.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. officials and international financial institutions should support qualifying nuclear energy projects abroad, including small modular reactors, when projects meet specified safety or technology standards.”
1 bill on this topic
“The United States should pay agreed dues to some international organizations, while past-due payments should be limited to uses accepted by both the United States and the organization and reported to Congress.”
1 bill on this topic
“Money withheld from covered U.N. speech-labeling activities should not count as unpaid debt that the United States later owes to the United Nations or its bodies.”
1 bill on this topic
“When federal money is withheld because it would support a covered iVerify or speech-labeling activity, that money should be permanently canceled instead of used for another purpose?”
1 bill on this topic
“Fossil fuel finance limits should cover a wide range of coal, oil, and gas work, including finding, producing, moving, burning, selling, processing, and refining fuels, as well as development bank policy changes that encourage fossil fuel investment.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. money should not be used for the WHO pandemic accord or the Arms Trade Treaty unless the Senate formally approves the agreement.”
1 bill on this topic
“Canceled money from the covered funding bans should go into the U.S. Treasury's general fund rather than stay in a foreign policy, U.N., or international assistance account.”
1 bill on this topic
“The State Department should give Congress the latest two-year UN budget and warn appropriators before the UN raises program spending without cutting spending somewhere else, with emergency notice allowed as soon as practicable.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. support for UN peacekeeping should depend on safeguards against trafficking, sexual abuse, and human rights violations; screening peacekeepers for past abuses; fair chances for U.S. suppliers to win contracts; and limits on U.S. troops serving under foreign command.”
1 bill on this topic
“U.S. money should not be used for contributions, grants, or other payments to UNRWA through March 25, 2027, including covered old funds, 2026 funds, and early 2027 funds.”
2 bills on this topic
“U.S. agencies should not provide money, insurance, guarantees, technical help, or policy advice for overseas coal, oil, or gas work or related infrastructure, including support routed through another lender, fund, or intermediary.”
1 bill on this topic
“The United States should support major international development bank funding rounds and capital commitments, and some World Bank International Development Association securities should receive a special U.S. securities-law exemption with safeguards.”
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