H.R. 8821In committeeCrime & justice
House bill would strip federal funds from cities that dropped cash bail
Data as of July 11, 2026
A House bill would cut all federal funding to any jurisdiction the Attorney General finds has largely eliminated cash bail.65-second read · 5 questions answered below
Decoded
What does this do?
This bill would cut off all federal funding to cities, counties, or states that the U.S. Attorney General determines have substantially eliminated cash bail for crimes including violence, sex offenses, burglary, vandalism, and looting. The Attorney General would conduct reviews every three months. A jurisdiction found in violation would lose federal funding until at least 180 days after that finding, and only after the Attorney General confirms cash bail has been restored.
Who does it affect?
Residents of cities, counties, or states that have reformed or eliminated cash bail would be most directly affected. Local and state officials in those jurisdictions would face pressure to restore cash bail or lose access to federal dollars.
Why does it matter?
Federal funds support a wide range of services including road repairs, schools, housing assistance, and law enforcement grants, so a funding cutoff could reduce or eliminate programs local residents depend on. The bill does not specify which federal funding streams would be cut, meaning the impact could extend across many programs at once.
What does it cost, and who pays?
- All federal funds at risk for violators
- No specific dollar amounts named
- Roads, schools, housing, grants included
Where does it stand?
- Introduced
- House committee — You are here
- House vote
- Senate
- President's desk
Right now: a House committee is reviewing it. If the Senate changes it, it goes back to the House before reaching the President.
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Official title
No Bailouts for Cashless Bail Jurisdictions Act
- Introduced:
- May 14, 2026
- Latest action:
- May 14, 2026
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, 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.
Read the official bill on Congress.govMake the call
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