S-4798-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Sponsored by Jon Husted (R-OH)
What it does
This bill would require every federal agency to identify all equity stakes it holds in privately owned, for-profit companies — including stock, partnership interests, warrants, options, governance rights like board seats or veto powers, and rights to compel an IPO. Each agency would then be required to sell (liquidate) those holdings within 8 years of enactment, or within 8 years of acquiring any future equity stake. All proceeds from those sales would be sent to the U.S. Treasury and applied directly to paying down the national debt.
Who benefits
U.S. taxpayers broadly, if debt reduction lowers long-term interest costs on the national debt. Private companies currently subject to federal equity ownership, who would regain full private control and be freed from government governance rights (e.g., board seats, veto powers). Competitors of those companies, who may currently face an uneven playing field against firms with implicit government backing. Free-market advocates who prefer a clear separation between government and private enterprise. Future generations who would benefit from a reduced national debt burden.
Who is hurt
Companies that currently benefit from federal equity relationships — including access to government networks, implicit backing, or favorable terms — and whose valuations may decline once that relationship ends. Workers at those companies, if forced divestitures occur at unfavorable times and destabilize the firms. Federal agencies that use equity stakes as a policy tool (e.g., to enforce conditions on bailout recipients or strategic investments). Taxpayers, if forced liquidations occur during market downturns and result in below-market sale prices. Industries — such as defense, energy, and financial services — where the government has historically used equity stakes to advance national security or economic stability goals.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government has no business holding ownership stakes in private companies, as this creates conflicts of interest, distorts market competition, and blurs the line between public governance and private enterprise. They contend that government equity ownership — particularly instruments conferring board seats or veto rights — gives federal agencies undue influence over corporate decisions that should be made by private shareholders. Directing proceeds to debt reduction, they argue, converts idle or distorting government assets into a concrete fiscal benefit, reducing the interest burden that currently costs taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars annually.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federal equity stakes are often acquired as deliberate policy tools — such as during the 2008–2009 financial crisis bailouts of automakers and banks — and that a blanket liquidation mandate removes the government's flexibility to use ownership as leverage to protect taxpayer interests or enforce conditions on recipients of federal assistance. They contend that forcing sales on a fixed 8-year timeline, regardless of market conditions, could result in the government selling assets at a loss, ultimately costing taxpayers more than it saves. They also argue the bill could undermine national security by requiring divestiture of strategic equity positions in defense or critical infrastructure firms.