A Complete Governing Framework, Ready for Institutional Review
Review. Score. Adapt. Introduce.
The National Sovereignty and Resilience Act is published as a complete governing framework for review, legislative adaptation, coalition development, and congressional introduction. Access the materials needed to evaluate the Act, brief decision-makers, identify committee jurisdiction, and begin an adoption process.
The public website explains why America needs the NSRA. This portal explains how an institution can evaluate, adopt, modify, score, and introduce it.
Value that should stay in the domestic economy, corporate rents, adversary capital, monopoly drug pricing, untaxed extraction, currently leaks out while households absorb the cost. The NSRA recaptures that value and returns it as concrete relief, without new broad-based taxes.
What are its major public benefits?
$35 insulin and G7-matched drug prices, a cap on corporate single-family landlords, coverage for the ~28M uninsured, student-loan relief, veterans’ support, and a ban on congressional stock trading.
How is it financed?
Recapture of value leaving the economy across 12 scored base revenue streams plus supplemental enforcement recapture, not broad-based tax increases. Documented in Schedule G and the Figure-by-Figure Sourcing.
What begins in Year 1?
Statutory price caps, the housing cap, initial enforcement activation, and first-year household relief for 79M+ Americans.
What is conditional on revenue or certification?
Expanded outlays phase in behind fiscal-certification gates and SIRF capitalization, benefits scale as verified revenue arrives, protecting against macroeconomic shock.
What is the projected fiscal effect?
A modeled ~$554B annual deficit reduction and a central balanced-budget projection by Year 4.
Why are the titles integrated?
Revenue, enforcement, and benefit provisions are interdependent by design. Titles are severable and can move alone (§205), but separating a benefit from its funding or enforcement changes its fiscal effect, see dependency labels below.
What does adoption require?
Anywhere from a 30-minute briefing to sponsorship of a single title to full introduction. No endorsement of TheAmericanDeal, Inc. is required, the text is published for public use.
$749B
Annual base-revenue model
Internally modeled on published federal, institutional, and academic baselines. Official congressional scoring pending introduction.
$554B
Modeled annual deficit reduction
Internally modeled and sensitivity-tested; not an official CBO/JCT score.
Not every office will adopt all 36 titles at once. Each route below is a real entry point, with the caveat that benefits, revenue, and enforcement are engineered to travel together.
Evaluate individual titles while preserving the fiscal, enforcement, and implementation dependencies required for the provision to operate.
Every title carries a dependency label so a provision isn’t severed from its revenue or enforcement:
StandalonePortable with amendmentsRequires Schedule G fundingRequires FMIARequires SIRFRequires companion enforcementIntegrated, separation not recommended
Candidates, caucuses, and policy organizations may evaluate the NSRA as a governing platform without representing the framework as introduced federal legislation.
The 36 titles are organized into five coordinated bills, introduced in the same Congress and sequenced so each builds credibility and coalition for the next. Each bill is self-funding and constitutionally grounded on its own, so if some pass and others stall, Americans still get major wins. This is distinct from §205 severability, which protects the Act if a court strikes a title. The full title-by-title breakdown, with plain-language and statutory toggles, is on the public Policy Vault.
Bill 1 — The American Fiscal Integrity Act
Public descriptor: Fiscal Credibility. Titles XXIV · IRS Enforcement · Defense Efficiency Pure fiscal, no new benefits. Strongest cross-party appeal; passage funds everything else.
Bill 2 — The American Health Sovereignty Act
Public descriptor: Healthcare Relief. Titles XXI · XIII · XXV · Schedule F Broadest consumer coalition; drug pricing is genuinely bipartisan. Introduced after fiscal credibility is established.
Bill 3 — The American Economic Sovereignty Act
Public descriptor: Household Prosperity & Accountability. Titles II · V · XIV · XV · XXII Child Prosperity, housing, and PE accountability, sequenced after Bills 1–2 build momentum.
Bill 4 — The American Supply Chain Sovereignty Act
Public descriptor: Trade & Energy Sovereignty. Titles VII · VIII · IX · XII · XXIII · XXX A distinct trade/energy coalition; WEA advances after USITC pre-scoring.
Bill 5 — The American Accountability and Data Rights Act
Public descriptor: Enforcement & Structure. Titles I · III · IV · X · XI · XVIII · XXVI · Schedule E The FMIA enforcement backbone, introduced last, after the provisions it enforces are already law.
Fiscal Model & Evidence Room
“How do you get $749 billion?”
The first institutional question deserves a transparent answer. The interactive model lets a reviewer set their own realization rate and toggle streams; the full Schedule G build-up and per-stream evidence cards (statutory authority, mechanism, baseline source, base year, assumption, phase-in, sensitivity, confidence, and official-scoring status) are being published stream-by-stream.
Preliminary jurisdiction analysis; final referral is determined by the House and Senate Parliamentarians. A framework of this scale may receive multiple referrals or require a coordinated multi-committee strategy. The full per-title map ships in the Committee Package. Open the Committee Package →
The Review Record, what we pressure-tested before publishing
Constitutional Red-Team
Every provision pressure-tested against current Supreme Court doctrine before publication.
Completed
Congressional Viability Audit
Reviewed for procedural survivability, referral pathways, and markup exposure.
Completed
Committee-Jurisdiction Analysis
All 36 titles mapped to their likely House and Senate committees of reference.
Completed
Regulatory & Red-Tape Reduction Audit
Screened for administrative burden, duplicative process, and deregulatory offsets.
Completed
Fiscal Stress-Test
Revenue modeled under low/base/high scenarios with sensitivity analysis.
Completed
Implementation-Readiness Review
Enactment-to-operation sequencing and agency-capacity assessment.
Completed
The Act includes a Statement of Constitutional Authority and Title 0 findings covering Commerce Clause, Taxing & Spending, and Necessary & Proper grounding, plus federalism, nondelegation and major-questions safeguards, severability architecture, judicial-review provisions, preemption analysis, and an enforcement-authority inventory. Review status is shown honestly, internal completion does not imply external validation.
Review domain
Status
Constitutional authority statement & Title 0 findings
The Evidence Standard is The American Deal’s quality-assurance framework for material fiscal, legal, demographic, operational, and implementation claims. It does not represent CBO, JCT, congressional counsel, or independent institutional approval unless expressly stated.
Review domain
Internal status
External status
Fiscal sourcing
Complete
Review pending
Revenue methodology
Complete
Replication pending
Statutory consistency
Complete
Legislative counsel pending
Constitutional grounding
Complete
Specialist review pending
Implementation logic
Complete
Agency review pending
Cross-title dependencies
Complete
Review pending
Source attribution
Complete
Auditable
Sensitivity analysis
Complete
Review pending
Amendment & Dependency Review
Before you remove a provision, see what moves with it
Select a title to see instantly what it depends on, the effect of removing it, and whether severance is safe, before you touch the text. This is an automated screening tool; a formal written memorandum with modeled figures is available on request below.
Constitutional grounding: authority and protections
For a policymaker, the question is whether this survives judicial review and can move through Congress. It rests on enumerated federal powers, is hardened against nondelegation and major-questions challenges, and is severable under §205, so titles can advance individually and the Act survives a strike on any one.
The authority the Act rests on
Commerce Clause
Art. I, §8, cl. 3, regulation of interstate commerce and financial markets.
Spending Clause
Art. I, §8, cl. 1, conditions attached to federal funds (coverage, relief, grants).
Necessary & Proper
Art. I, §8, cl. 18, the mechanisms carrying the enumerated powers into effect.
General Welfare
The taxing-and-spending power behind the fiscal and benefit architecture.
The protections built in
Fifth Amendment takings
Market-rate, arms-length divestiture with an independent-appraisal right and Court of Federal Claims review; drafted to satisfy the Penn Central test.
Licensing, not expropriation
Pharmaceutical enforcement is a compulsory license, patent retained, 8%/12%/4% royalty, just-compensation arbitration, designed to preserve patent ownership and reduce constitutional takings risk. Final classification pending judicial review.
Procedural due process
45/60/180-day pre-deprivation notice (Title XVIII), engineered to Mathews v. Eldridge, plus an ALJ verification warrant before large asset actions.
Article III & jury right
Consistent with SEC v. Jarkesy, civil penalties go to an Article III court with the Seventh Amendment jury right; ALJs handle only temporary asset-preservation.
Nondelegation & major questions
Mandatory triggers are fixed by Congress in statute, supplying an intelligible principle responsive to Gundy and West Virginia v. EPA.
Severability
§205, striking one title leaves the rest of the Act in full force, with a fallback appropriation protecting first-tier benefits.
Complete the form below, it submits directly to our team at contact@theamericandeal.org. Virtual, written, in-person, and confidential preliminary discussions are all available.
How adoption works. “Adopting” the NSRA means sponsoring, co-sponsoring, or campaigning on its text, it does not require any endorsement of TheAmericanDeal, Inc. On the figures: fiscal and impact numbers are NSRA model estimates built on published CBO, JCT, OMB, GAO, Treasury, OECD, and peer-reviewed baselines, internally modeled and sensitivity-tested, not yet officially scored by CBO or JCT, which is pending and welcomed. Statutory parameters (e.g., the $35 insulin cap, the 50-unit housing cap) are the text of the bill, not projections. TheAmericanDeal, Inc. is a Wyoming 501(c)(4) civic-education organization; materials are informational and non-partisan.
Canonical Version. The version published in the official NSRA legislative repository controls over summaries, campaign materials, third-party descriptions, and archived drafts. · Portal v1.0 · published July 11, 2026 · last substantive revision July 11, 2026.