HR-7894-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 633.
Sponsored by Elise Stefanik (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would overhaul the Harry S Truman Scholarship Foundation, which awards scholarships to college students pursuing public service careers. It would dissolve the existing Board of Trustees 90 days after enactment and replace it with a new 13-member board subject to political balance requirements. It would also codify explicit eligibility and disqualification criteria for scholarship applicants, add new grounds for revoking scholarships already awarded (including felony conviction and certain campus disciplinary actions), and require the Foundation to publicly preserve all press releases, program announcements, and scholar biographies in unaltered form.
Who benefits
Future Truman Scholarship applicants who benefit from codified, transparent selection criteria. Congressional leaders of both parties, who gain direct board appointment power. Students pursuing MBA or MD degrees, who would be explicitly protected from being disfavored in selection. The general public, who would gain access to a permanent, unaltered archive of Foundation communications. Taxpayers and oversight advocates who favor greater transparency in federally chartered foundations.
Who is hurt
Current members of the Truman Scholarship Foundation Board of Trustees, who would be removed from their positions 90 days after enactment. The current Executive Secretary, whose tenure would end once a new board appoints a replacement. Students who have been suspended or expelled from college, or who led organizations that were disciplined, as they would be permanently barred from receiving or continuing scholarships. Students convicted of a felony at any point after receiving a scholarship would lose their award and could owe repayment with 6% interest. The Foundation's existing staff and leadership, who would face institutional disruption during the transition period.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Truman Foundation has operated without adequate political balance or public accountability, and that restructuring the board with bipartisan appointment mechanisms — no more than four of eight presidential appointees from the same party — ensures the program serves all Americans rather than a narrow ideological constituency. They contend that codifying clear disqualification criteria (felony convictions, campus expulsions) and protecting students pursuing business or medical degrees from adverse consideration corrects documented selection bias. The transparency provisions, requiring permanent public archiving of Foundation materials, give taxpayers and applicants a verifiable record of how a federally chartered institution operates.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that dissolving an entire sitting board of a federally chartered foundation — removing all members simultaneously with 90 days' notice — is an unprecedented disruption to an institution that has operated for decades, and risks interrupting scholarship administration for current recipients. They contend that the new disqualification rules, particularly barring students who led organizations later disciplined by their university, could sweep in students who had no personal wrongdoing and whose organizations were penalized for reasons unrelated to their leadership. Critics further argue that the political balance requirements, while facially neutral, inject partisan considerations into what has historically been a merit-based academic selection process.