S-4454-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
What it does
This bill would amend the Consumer Product Safety Act to remove the longstanding exemption that excludes pistols, revolvers, and other firearms from the definition of "consumer product." Removing this exemption would give the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) the legal authority to research, develop, and issue mandatory safety standards for firearms — such as rules about design, materials, or safety mechanisms. The bill does not itself set any specific safety standards; it only removes the barrier that currently prevents the CPSC from doing so.
Who benefits
Firearm owners and buyers who may benefit from design-based safety features (e.g., drop-safety mechanisms, trigger guards) required by future CPSC standards. Families of victims of unintentional firearm discharges, particularly children. Consumer safety advocates and public health researchers who would gain a federal regulatory body with authority to study and act on firearm-related injuries. The CPSC itself, which would gain a significant new area of jurisdiction. Manufacturers who already produce safer designs and could benefit from competitors being held to the same standard.
Who is hurt
Firearm manufacturers and importers who would face new compliance costs and potential product redesign requirements under future CPSC rules. Firearms retailers who may face inventory disruptions if existing products are found non-compliant. Consumers who prefer existing firearm designs and may see price increases or reduced product availability. Smaller firearms manufacturers with fewer resources to absorb compliance costs. Gun rights organizations that oppose expanded federal regulatory authority over firearms.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that firearms are the only major consumer product category explicitly shielded from CPSC oversight, a carve-out that has no safety justification — the CPSC regulates everything from cribs to power tools. They contend that unintentional firearm deaths, which the CDC estimates at roughly 500–600 per year including approximately 100 children, could be reduced through design standards similar to those the CPSC applies to other dangerous products. They further argue the bill does not ban any firearm or infringe on Second Amendment rights — it simply subjects guns to the same product safety framework as any other item sold to consumers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that granting the CPSC broad rulemaking authority over all firearms would constitute a major expansion of federal regulatory power over a constitutionally protected product, raising serious concerns under the major questions doctrine established in West Virginia v. EPA (2022), which requires clear congressional authorization for agency rules of vast economic and political significance. They contend that CPSC safety standards could effectively ban or severely restrict entire categories of widely owned firearms through design mandates — achieving through regulation what Congress could not do through legislation — and that post-Loper Bright, courts will independently scrutinize whether any resulting CPSC rules stay within the bounds of this statutory grant.
Constitutional context
The Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) gives Congress authority to regulate the manufacture and sale of firearms as articles of interstate commerce, which is well-established. However, any CPSC rules issued under this new authority would face heightened judicial scrutiny under West Virginia v. EPA (2022) and Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024): courts would independently assess whether specific CPSC standards exceed the agency's statutory mandate, and sweeping rules could be challenged as requiring clearer congressional authorization.
Checks and balances
Congress would expand CPSC's authority; the CPSC (executive branch agency) would gain new rulemaking power over firearms; courts would check that authority through independent statutory review under Loper Bright and the major questions doctrine.
Historical precedent
The original Consumer Product Safety Act of 1972 explicitly excluded firearms from CPSC jurisdiction; prior legislative attempts to remove this exclusion have been introduced in multiple Congresses but have not been enacted.