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Require the installation of automatic emergency braking systems in all new passenger vehicles.

One policy goal, tracked across every bill that has carried it.

Known asTyler’s Law

What’s happening with Tyler’s Law?

The effort to require automatic emergency braking systems is active through S. 921, which passed the Senate on March 23, 2026. The House must now schedule a floor vote to move the bill forward, but leadership has not taken action since June 24, 2026. History shows that bills passing one chamber often fail to become law, as the House schedule is controlled by leadership discretion.

Updated July 9, 2026 · Generated by AI. Always verify with official sources.

Where it stands

Now carried by Tyler’s Law (S. 921 (119th)) →

Legislative Progress

Senate
House
President
Law

How we got here

Every bill that has carried this goal, oldest first.

  1. Died with Congress · Jan 3, 2025

    Died when the 118th Congress ended without final passage. Bills must be reintroduced under a new number to be revived.

  2. Reintroduced · Jan 3, 2025

    Reintroduced from H.R. 6600 (118th), which died when its Congress ended.

    H.R. 6600 (118th)

Vehicles

Who’s behind it

Jim Banks (R-IN)Wrote and sponsored the current bill.