HR-6106-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on the Judiciary, and Rules, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by August Pfluger (R-TX)
What it does
The CLEAR Path Act (HR 6106, 119th Congress) was introduced on November 18, 2025, and referred to the Committees on Foreign Affairs, the Judiciary, and Rules. The full text of the bill was not provided beyond its title, so the specific mechanical provisions cannot be determined from the available information. Based on its committee referrals — spanning Foreign Affairs and the Judiciary — the bill would likely address matters at the intersection of criminal justice and foreign policy, such as immigration enforcement, international law enforcement cooperation, or cross-border legal procedures.
Who benefits
Cannot be determined with specificity from the available bill text. Based on the committee referrals (Foreign Affairs, Judiciary, Rules), potential beneficiaries could include individuals navigating cross-border legal processes, law enforcement agencies, or parties involved in international criminal or civil proceedings — but this is speculative without the full bill text.
Who is hurt
Cannot be determined with specificity from the available bill text. Without the full legislative language, it is not possible to identify which groups may bear costs, face new restrictions, or be otherwise negatively affected by this bill's provisions.
Supporters argue
Because the full text of the bill was not provided, a steel-manned supporter argument cannot be constructed without risk of fabricating or misrepresenting the bill's actual provisions and intent. A complete analysis requires the full legislative text.
Opponents argue
Because the full text of the bill was not provided, a steel-manned opponent argument cannot be constructed without risk of fabricating or misrepresenting the bill's actual provisions and intent. A complete analysis requires the full legislative text.