HR-8337-119
Referred to the Committee on Education and Workforce, and in addition to the Committees on Agriculture, Armed Services, and Transportation and Infrastructure, 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 Julia Letlow (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would prohibit federal agencies from purchasing foreign seafood for covered food programs, including school lunch and breakfast programs, military food service, emergency food assistance, FEMA disaster relief food programs, and any other federally funded food program. Seafood would qualify only if harvested in U.S. waters by a U.S.-flagged vessel, or produced through domestic aquaculture or domestic processing. The Secretary of Agriculture could grant waivers if domestic supply is insufficient or fails to meet food safety and quality standards, with each waiver published in the Federal Register and reported to Congress within 30 days. The bill directs the Secretary of Agriculture, in consultation with the Secretaries of Commerce and Defense, to issue implementing regulations within 180 days and explicitly authorizes no new appropriations.
Who benefits
U.S. commercial fishing fleets and fishermen, particularly in coastal states such as Alaska, Louisiana, Maine, and the Gulf Coast region. Domestic seafood processors and aquaculture operators. U.S.-flagged vessel owners and maritime workers. Domestic seafood distributors and wholesalers who supply federal contracts. Rural fishing-dependent communities whose local economies rely on commercial fishing. Indirectly, domestic seafood retailers who may see increased demand spillover from federal purchasing shifts.
Who is hurt
Foreign seafood exporters — particularly from major U.S. import sources such as China, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Ecuador — who currently supply federal food programs. Federal food program administrators who may face higher procurement costs or supply constraints, particularly for shrimp, tilapia, and catfish, which are heavily imported. School districts and other program operators that may pay more for seafood or face reduced menu variety if domestic supply is limited. Taxpayers who fund federal food programs if domestic seafood costs more than imported alternatives. Low-income program beneficiaries who could see reduced seafood frequency on menus if costs rise. Importers and brokers who currently facilitate foreign seafood procurement for federal contracts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States imports roughly 70–85% of its seafood, much of it from countries with weaker labor and environmental standards, and that federal food dollars should support American workers and domestic industries rather than foreign competitors. They contend that domestic seafood is subject to rigorous U.S. food safety oversight, making it a higher-quality and more accountable choice for programs serving children, military personnel, and disaster survivors. Supporters also argue the bill strengthens domestic supply chain resilience — a concern highlighted by pandemic-era food supply disruptions — and that the waiver mechanism provides a practical safety valve to prevent program disruptions when domestic supply genuinely falls short.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that restricting federal seafood procurement to domestic sources would raise costs for programs already operating under tight budgets, potentially reducing the frequency or quantity of seafood served to low-income children and disaster victims. They contend that the U.S. domestic seafood industry cannot reliably supply the volume, species variety, and year-round consistency that large federal programs require, meaning waivers could become routine rather than exceptional. Opponents also argue the bill may conflict with U.S. obligations under World Trade Organization government procurement agreements, potentially inviting retaliatory trade measures that harm American exporters in unrelated sectors, and that the explicit prohibition on new appropriations means program operators must absorb any cost increases within existing budgets.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to set conditions on federal spending and procurement under the Spending Clause and the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8). Domestic procurement preferences are a well-established exercise of that authority. Because the bill delegates regulatory authority to the Secretary of Agriculture, post-Loper Bright (2024) courts would independently assess whether the implementing regulations stay within the statutory boundaries Congress set, rather than deferring to the agency's interpretation.
Checks and balances
Congress gains authority by setting a categorical procurement restriction; the Executive Branch (Secretary of Agriculture) holds limited waiver power subject to defined criteria, with each waiver subject to mandatory public disclosure in the Federal Register and congressional reporting, providing legislative oversight of agency discretion.
Historical precedent
The Buy American Act of 1933 and subsequent amendments establish a longstanding framework of domestic procurement preferences for federal purchases; the Berry Amendment similarly requires the Department of Defense to procure certain food items, including seafood, from domestic sources, providing a direct statutory analogue for military food programs.