Washington, D.C. – Today, the House Appropriations Committee released the Fiscal Year 2025 bill for the Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee. The bill will be considered in subcommittee tomorrow, June 5th at 8:30 a.m. The markup will be live-streamed and can be found on the Committee’s website.
Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee Chairman Dave Joyce (R-OH) said, “As Chairman of this subcommittee, I have worked diligently to ensure this bill provides the resources necessary to protect the integrity of our financial and judicial systems. At the same time, this bill reins in wasteful spending and takes steps to prevent agencies like the IRS from unfairly targeting hardworking Americans. By returning these agencies under our jurisdiction to their core missions, this bill guarantees these institutions work for the American people like they were intended to do.”
Chairman Tom Cole (R-OK) said, “The FY25 FSGG bill protects taxpayers and constrains the burdensome hands of unelected bureaucrats. The integrity of our financial and judicial systems is supported without adding the red tape and reckless spending the White House requested. Above all, we made sure to focus agencies on their core missions. It’s a product that responsibly ensures government works for the people, and I am grateful for the leadership of Chairman Joyce.”
Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Bill
The Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Bill provides a total discretionary allocation of $23.608 billion, which is nearly 20% below the President’s Budget Request and nearly 10% below the effective spending level provided in Fiscal Year 2024. The defense portion of the allocation is $45 million, and the non-defense portion of the allocation is $23.563 billion.
The bill prioritizes agencies and programs that combat terrorism financing, maintain the integrity of our financial markets, spur small business growth, support the judicial branch, and target opioid abuse.
Key Takeaways
A summary of the bill is available here.
Bill text is available here.