HR-8058-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Cory Mills (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would establish a $106 million reserve fund for the U.S. Secret Service, available only during a lapse in appropriations (a government shutdown). The Director of the Secret Service could draw on the fund for up to 30 days to cover protection costs and employee salaries for individuals legally entitled to Secret Service protection under 18 U.S.C. § 3056. Any unused funds would be returned to the Treasury and rescinded by January 31, 2027, and the Director would be required to report all fund usage to six designated congressional committees.
Who benefits
Current and former presidents, vice presidents, and other individuals entitled to Secret Service protection under federal law, who would continue to receive uninterrupted protection during a shutdown. Secret Service agents and support staff who would continue to receive salaries during a lapse in appropriations. The general public, which has an interest in the continuity of executive protection. Families of Secret Service employees who depend on uninterrupted paychecks.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $106 million appropriation, though unused funds would be rescinded. Other federal agencies that compete for discretionary funding and do not have similar reserve fund protections. Federal workers in other agencies who may face unpaid furloughs during the same shutdown period, potentially highlighting an inequity in treatment across the federal workforce.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Secret Service protection is a non-negotiable national security function that cannot be safely interrupted by political disputes over the federal budget. They contend that government shutdowns have repeatedly forced the Secret Service to operate without pay, undermining morale and operational readiness at precisely the moments when continuity matters most. A dedicated reserve fund, with a hard 30-day cap and a mandatory return of unused funds, provides a targeted, fiscally bounded solution to a genuine security gap.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating agency-specific reserve funds to bypass the appropriations process sets a problematic precedent — if the Secret Service receives a shutdown buffer, other agencies with equally critical missions (such as the FBI, Border Patrol, or air traffic control) may demand the same treatment, gradually eroding Congress's leverage in budget negotiations. They contend that the proper solution is to pass timely appropriations or enact broader essential-services legislation, rather than carving out individual agencies with dedicated slush funds that reduce the political pressure to resolve shutdowns quickly.