HR 747 · 119th Congress · International Affairs
Stop Chinese Fentanyl Act of 2025
Bill Progress
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Introduced✓
Committee✓
House Vote4
Senate5
EnactedLatest: Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.(2025-09-03)
Recorded Votes
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Plain Language Summary
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Stop Chinese Fentanyl Act of 2025 This bill subjects certain Chinese entities and government officials to potential sanctions related to opioid trafficking and requires the President to conduct certain preliminary analyses before regulating economic transactions in the event of a national emergency related to international drug trafficking. Specifically, for the purposes of the Fentanyl Sanctions Act, the bill changes the definition of foreign opioid trafficker to specify that the term includes (1) Chinese entities involved in the production or sale of synthetic opioids or related pharmaceutical ingredients that fail to take steps to detect or prevent opioid trafficking; and (2) certain senior Chinese government officials that aid and abet opioid trafficking, including through intentional inaction. Under current law, the President must impose certain sanctions on individuals and entities identified as foreign opioid traffickers. Further, the bill extends through 2029 an existing requirement that the President report to Congress annually on identified foreign opioid traffickers and any sanctions imposed on them. (This requirement expired in December 2024.) The bill also requir…
Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only
CBO Cost Estimate
Congressional Budget OfficeH.R. 747, Stop Chinese Fentanyl Act of 2025
Apr 1, 2025As reported by the House Committee on Financial Services on March 21, 2025
Full CBO report ↗H.R. 747, Stop Chinese Fentanyl Act of 2025
May 22, 2025As ordered reported by the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on April 9, 2025
Full CBO report ↗Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office
Cosponsors (9)
2 Democrats7 Republicans