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A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the United States should reduce and maintain the Federal unified budget deficit at or below 3 percent of gross domestic product.

4/1/2026, 10:37 AM

Summary of Bill SRES 654

This is Senate Resolution 654 from the 119th Congress introduced on March 20, 2026. The resolution expresses the Senate's view that the United States should decrease and uphold the Federal unified budget deficit to 3 percent or less of the gross domestic product.

Congressional Summary of SRES 654

This resolution expresses the sense of the Senate that (1) Congress should adopt a fiscal target to reduce the federal budget deficit to 3% of gross domestic product or less as soon as possible and no later than the end of FY2030; and (2) after the target is achieved, Congress should continue to pursue further deficit reduction with the goal of achieving a balanced federal budget.

Read the Full Bill

Current Status of Bill SRES 654

Bill SRES 654 is currently in the status of Bill Introduced since March 20, 2026. Bill SRES 654 was introduced during Congress 119 and was introduced to the Senate on March 20, 2026.  Bill SRES 654's most recent activity was Referred to the Committee on the Budget. (text: CR S1444) as of March 20, 2026

Bipartisan Support of Bill SRES 654

Total Number of Sponsors
1
Democrat Sponsors
0
Republican Sponsors
1
Unaffiliated Sponsors
0
Total Number of Cosponsors
3
Democrat Cosponsors
1
Republican Cosponsors
1
Unaffiliated Cosponsors
1

Policy Area and Potential Impact of Bill SRES 654

Primary Policy Focus

Economics and Public Finance

Alternate Title(s) of Bill SRES 654

A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the United States should reduce and maintain the Federal unified budget deficit at or below 3 percent of gross domestic product.
A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the United States should reduce and maintain the Federal unified budget deficit at or below 3 percent of gross domestic product.

Comments

Kyle Stout profile image

Kyle Stout

661

21 days ago

I don't agree with this. How will it impact our future generations?