HR-867-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Michael Lawler (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would expand an existing U.S. law that penalizes American individuals and companies for complying with foreign government-imposed boycotts of U.S.-friendly countries. It would apply those same prohibitions to boycotts imposed by international governmental organizations (IGOs). Prohibited actions would include refusing to do business with companies from the boycotted country at an IGO's request, and sharing information about a person's business ties or charitable affiliations with the boycotted country. Criminal penalties for willful violations would include fines up to $1 million and imprisonment up to 20 years; civil penalties could include fines and revocation of export licenses. The President would also be required to submit an annual public report to Congress identifying countries and IGOs involved in such boycotts.
Who benefits
U.S. companies that face pressure from IGOs to comply with boycotts and want legal clarity on their obligations. Countries that are the targets of IGO-imposed boycotts (most likely Israel, given the existing law's context). U.S. exporters who could use the law as a legal shield against IGO compliance demands. Domestic industries with strong trade ties to boycotted countries. Advocacy groups opposed to IGO-directed economic pressure campaigns.
Who is hurt
U.S. businesses that operate within IGO frameworks and may face conflicting legal obligations — complying with the IGO risks U.S. penalties, while defying the IGO risks loss of membership benefits or contracts. Multinational corporations with complex international supply chains that must now navigate an expanded compliance burden. IGOs whose economic policy tools would be constrained by U.S. domestic law. U.S. persons who hold principled objections to doing business with a particular country and act in response to IGO guidance. Legal and compliance departments at large firms that would bear increased administrative costs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing anti-boycott law has successfully deterred foreign governments from pressuring U.S. companies since the 1970s Arab League boycott, and that extending it to IGOs closes a significant loophole that bad actors could exploit. They contend that IGOs increasingly serve as vehicles for coordinated economic pressure campaigns against U.S. allies, and that without this extension, American businesses could be coerced into participating in politically motivated boycotts simply because the pressure comes from a multilateral body rather than a single government. The annual reporting requirement would also give Congress and the public greater transparency into which organizations are engaging in such conduct.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending criminal penalties — including up to 20 years in prison — to compliance with IGO policies could place U.S. businesses in an impossible legal bind when IGO membership rules conflict with U.S. law, potentially forcing American companies out of important international bodies. They contend that the bill's broad prohibition on furnishing information about business relationships could chill legitimate commercial due diligence and that the severe penalties are disproportionate to the conduct targeted. Critics may also argue that the bill effectively uses domestic criminal law to override multilateral economic policy decisions, undermining U.S. engagement in international institutions.