FY26 NSRP Appropriations Oversight Tracker

What We Do

FY26 NSRP Appropriations Oversight Tracker

On February 3, the President signed into law the FY2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act – a vital reassertion of Congress’s constitutional “power of the purse” over federal spending. That law includes $50 billion for National Security, State Department, and Related Programs (NSRP) in bipartisan text that was hammered out over months of negotiations involving the House, the Senate, the Administration, and the broader advocacy community. The NSRP funding levels indicate Congress’s intent to continue investing in effective foreign assistance.

As with prior years, the FY2026 NSRP text imposes numerous consultation, notification, and reporting requirements on the Administration. These oversight tools help Congress ensure that appropriated funds are being used as intended and stipulated in the law. But because those requirements are scattered throughout hundreds of pages of legislative text and have their own individual details and deadlines, they can be challenging to track.

The ONE spreadsheet (linked below) is an attempt to collect in one place the specific consultation, notification, and reporting requirements included in FY2026 NSRP appropriations. They are drawn from three sources:

  • The Statutory Text: The FY2026 NSRP Appropriations Act was passed as Division F of H.R. 7148, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, which was signed into law as Public Law 119-75 on February 3, 2026.
  • The Joint Explanatory Statement (JES): A joint explanatory statement is an agreed-upon reference negotiated by House and Senate conferees and submitted along with the final, conferenced bill text when it is considered for passage by both chambers. Section 4 of the statutory text (P.L. 119-75) deems the January 14, 2026 explanatory statement in the Congressional Record to be the JES for the FY2026 NSRP Appropriations bill.
  • The House Committee Report: House Report 119-27 is the report by the House Appropriations Committee that accompanied the original House FY2026 NSRP text, and outlines additional context and requirements. This report is treated as part of the JES because it is incorporated by reference in the JES (on page H856 of the Congressional Record).

The ONE spreadsheet shared here has a separate tab/worksheet for each of these sources, as well as a fourth tab/worksheet that collects the requirements most relevant to ONE’s key issues (which also are highlighted in blue in the first three tabs).