A bill to require the Secretary of Homeland Security to carry out prize competitions to advance the science of interpretability and to develop adversarial robustness with respect to artificial intelligence products, and for other purposes.

Bill ID: 119/s/3336
Last Updated: December 4, 2025

Sponsored by

Sen. Hassan, Margaret Wood [D-NH]

ID: H001076

Bill's Journey to Becoming a Law

Track this bill's progress through the legislative process

Latest Action

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

December 3, 2025

Introduced

Committee Review

📍 Current Status

Next: The bill moves to the floor for full chamber debate and voting.

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Floor Action

Passed Senate

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House Review

🎉

Passed Congress

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Presidential Action

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Became Law

📚 How does a bill become a law?

1. Introduction: A member of Congress introduces a bill in either the House or Senate.

2. Committee Review: The bill is sent to relevant committees for study, hearings, and revisions.

3. Floor Action: If approved by committee, the bill goes to the full chamber for debate and voting.

4. Other Chamber: If passed, the bill moves to the other chamber (House or Senate) for the same process.

5. Conference: If both chambers pass different versions, a conference committee reconciles the differences.

6. Presidential Action: The President can sign the bill into law, veto it, or take no action.

7. Became Law: If signed (or if Congress overrides a veto), the bill becomes law!

Bill Summary

No summary available

💰 Campaign Finance Network

No campaign finance data available for Sen. Hassan, Margaret Wood [D-NH]