HR-9284-119
Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, 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 Ro Khanna (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would create a new independent federal agency — the Foreign Investment Review Authority (FIRA) — to identify, track, and evaluate whether foreign countries have followed through on pledges to invest in the United States. FIRA would review individual investments to determine whether they qualify as "covered" and whether they provide a measurable economic benefit, including creating quality jobs. If a country falls short of its investment pledge after four years, the bill would require the President to enter into negotiations with that country to address the gap.
Who benefits
U.S. workers, particularly those without college degrees, who would benefit from job-quality standards attached to qualifying investments. Domestic manufacturers and suppliers who compete with foreign-assembled goods using imported components. Labor unions, which gain a seat on the Public Oversight Board and whose organizing rights are embedded in the "quality job" definition. Congress, which would gain structured oversight of executive-branch investment deals through mandatory reporting. Whistleblowers and the public, who would gain access to a complaint process and a public database of investment commitments and conflicts of interest. U.S. companies that compete with foreign-invested firms subject to antidumping or intellectual property orders.
Who is hurt
Foreign governments and companies — particularly from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China — whose investments would face new compliance burdens and potential disqualification. U.S. businesses receiving foreign investment that must now file detailed disclosures, attestations, and quarterly updates. Financial advisers, underwriters, and intermediaries involved in covered investments who face new disclosure requirements. The executive branch, whose flexibility to negotiate and announce investment deals without independent review would be constrained. Foreign investors whose deals involve foreign-produced components or assembly-only facilities, which the bill's "net economic benefit" definition disfavors. Senior government officials, including the President and cabinet members, who must disclose personal financial interests in covered investments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the executive branch has announced trillions of dollars in foreign investment pledges — from Japan ($550B), Taiwan ($500B), South Korea ($350B), and others — with no independent mechanism to verify whether those pledges translate into real jobs and domestic economic activity. They contend that without structured oversight, these announcements may amount to unverifiable political claims, and that FIRA's "quality job" and "net economic benefit" standards ensure that counted investments actually strengthen the U.S. economy rather than simply routing foreign capital through shell facilities using imported parts. The bill's bipartisan board structure and ethics requirements are designed to prevent conflicts of interest from distorting which investments receive favorable treatment.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new federal agency with authority to block, mediate, or prohibit foreign investments — and to impose its own "quality job" and "net economic benefit" standards — could deter legitimate foreign capital at a time when the U.S. competes globally for investment. They contend that the bill's labor-specific requirements (union neutrality, defined-benefit pensions, above-median wages) effectively embed one side of domestic labor policy debates into a foreign investment framework, and that the four-year compliance window and mandatory presidential negotiations could constrain executive flexibility in ongoing trade diplomacy. The requirement that four opposition-party members sit on FIRA's board is also constitutionally novel and may face Appointments Clause challenges.
Constitutional context
The Foreign Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) gives Congress broad authority to regulate commerce with foreign nations, supporting the bill's investment review framework. However, the bill's requirement that the President enter negotiations with foreign countries upon a compliance shortfall, and its structural constraints on executive-branch deal-making, touch the boundary between congressional oversight and the President's recognized primacy in foreign affairs under Zivotofsky v. Kerry (2015). The Appointments Clause (Art. II, §2, cl. 2) may also be implicated by the requirement that four board members be drawn from the opposition party, a condition not clearly authorized by existing appointments jurisprudence.
Checks and balances
Congress gains significant oversight authority through FIRA's mandatory reporting, a bipartisan board structure, and congressional appointments to the Public Oversight Board; the executive branch retains negotiating authority but loses unilateral control over which investment pledges count as fulfilled, with judicial review available through federal district courts.
Historical precedent
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), established by executive order in 1975 and codified by the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (FIRRMA) of 2018, provides a partial analogue — it reviews inbound foreign investments for national security risks — but FIRA's mandate to evaluate economic quality and track country-level pledges is a distinct and novel function.