House Passes Bill To Scrutinize Taliban Funding

The Republican-led House of Representatives recently passed the No Tax Dollars for Terrorists Act (H.R. 260), aimed at preventing international funding from reaching the Taliban, especially from entities receiving U.S. aid. Proposed by Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), the bill reflects growing concern that foreign cash aid to Afghanistan is being diverted to Taliban hands. Burchett emphasized that American taxpayers should not indirectly support a regime that harbors anti-U.S. sentiment.

The bill requires the Secretary of State to create a plan within 180 days to deter Taliban funding and instead support Afghan women and former U.S. allies. Though the act received bipartisan backing, Rep. Jonathan Jackson (D-Ill.) criticized the Trump administration for its lack of transparency in handling both Afghanistan and Iran, expressing a need for clearer policy direction.

In another recent move, the House passed the Protecting American Energy Production Act, designed to stop future presidents from banning hydraulic fracturing (fracking) without congressional approval. Introduced by Rep. August Pfluger (R-Texas), the legislation came in response to energy restrictions imposed by President Biden shortly before leaving office. Pfluger argued that Biden’s environmental agenda hurt domestic energy and catered to extreme activists.

President Trump, continuing his energy-first platform, has pledged to unleash American energy production. If signed into law, the new bill would secure fracking’s future and limit executive authority over energy regulations. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum is already rolling back climate-related restrictions on the energy sector.

Meanwhile, public dissatisfaction with congressional Democrats is rising. A Quinnipiac poll shows only 21% of voters approve of their performance—the lowest since 2009—while 70% disapprove, revealing a growing partisan divide in public confidence.