HR-6297-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Randy Fine (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of State to periodically brief Congress over a three-year period on two topics: (1) the threat of antisemitism and acts of international terrorism in Europe, and (2) U.S. diplomatic efforts with foreign governments to counter antisemitism and international terrorism that may threaten transatlantic stability, the safety of U.S. citizens abroad, and U.S. institutions overseas. It creates a reporting and oversight mechanism but does not authorize new spending, impose sanctions, or direct any specific diplomatic action.
Who benefits
Members of Congress and their staff who would gain structured, periodic intelligence and diplomatic updates on European antisemitism and terrorism. Jewish communities in Europe and the U.S. who may benefit from increased U.S. diplomatic attention to antisemitic threats. U.S. citizens living, working, or traveling in Europe who could benefit from enhanced transatlantic security cooperation. Think tanks, researchers, and advocacy organizations focused on antisemitism or counterterrorism who may gain access to publicly released findings.
Who is hurt
The State Department would bear the administrative burden of preparing and delivering periodic briefings, diverting staff time and resources from other diplomatic priorities. Foreign governments subject to diplomatic engagement on these topics may view the oversight mechanism as an intrusion into their domestic affairs, potentially complicating bilateral relations. No private individuals or industries face direct regulatory or financial harm from this bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that antisemitic incidents in Europe have risen sharply in recent years — the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights documented a 40% increase in reported antisemitic harassment across EU member states between 2018 and 2023 — and that Congress has a legitimate oversight interest in how the State Department is engaging allies on this threat. They contend that structured briefings ensure accountability, prevent diplomatic inaction, and strengthen transatlantic coordination on terrorism threats that directly endanger U.S. citizens and institutions abroad.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill is largely symbolic, creating a reporting requirement without mandating any concrete diplomatic action, funding, or enforceable outcomes — making it unlikely to produce measurable change in European antisemitism or terrorism levels. They contend that existing State Department reporting mechanisms, including the annual Country Reports on Terrorism and the Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, already cover this ground, and that adding duplicative briefing requirements consumes limited diplomatic staff resources without clear added value.