Twenty-eight academic leaders in securities and financial regulation are calling on Congress to reject provisions in the Responsible Financial Innovation Act of 2025 (RFIA) that would undermine the ability of state securities regulators to protect investors and combat fraud. The post Academic Leaders and Scholars Call on Congress to Keep States Essential Investor Protectors appeared first on NASAA.| NASAA
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Last week, Congressman David Schweikert (AZ-01) introduced the Postal Contracting Financial Accountability Act, H.R.5530, which protects community-based Contracted Postal Units...| Congressman Schweikert
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Last Night, two amendments offered by Congressman David Schweikert (AZ-01) were adopted into the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026....| Congressman Schweikert
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congressman David Schweikert (AZ-01) recently introduced the RESTART SUNSET Act of 2025 (Regulatory Evidence-based Standards for Thorough Accountability and Reassuring Tests — Securing Updated and Necessary Statutory Evaluations Timely), H.R.4770, which will bring long-overdue accountability to the federal rulemaking process.| Congressman Schweikert
Congresswoman Demands Fed Take Action to Uphold its Mandate of Maximum Employment for All Workers Pressley Also Presses Powell on...| Ayanna Pressley
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Last week, Congressman David Schweikert (AZ-01) introduced the Cybercrime Marque and Reprisal Authorization Act of 2025, H.R. 4988 This legislation revives Congress’s Article I authority to issue letters of marque and reprisal, allowing the executive branch to deputize licensed cyber operators to pursue foreign cybercriminal enterprises targeting American citizens and infrastructure.| schweikert.house.gov
WASHINGTON — House leadership pulled a Republican-led budget resolution from consideration as more than a dozen GOP lawmakers remain opposed to provisions implemented by their Senate colleagues.| Congressman Schweikert
House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith and other Republicans on the panel were giving a robust defense of President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff policy Wednesday even as the president was making a sharp course correction by pausing and lowering tariffs on 75 unspecified countries.| Congressman Schweikert
WASHINGTON, D.C. — “With just $4 billion in cuts— equal to less than a single day’s worth of borrowing— the Senate budget resolution is more business as usual at a time when that’s exactly what we’re trying to avoid,” said Arizona Congressman David Schweikert in a statement responding to Saturday’s release of the Senate’s Budget Resolution.| Congressman Schweikert