- Targeted stakeholdersDirect funding for habitat restoration and milkweed/nectar planting could increase on-the-ground conservation activity,…
- Local governmentsGrants and technical assistance would build capacity for state, Tribal, local, nonprofit, and research organizations to…
- Local governmentsFunding-driven restoration, monitoring, outreach, and project implementation could support short-term local jobs (resto…
MONARCH Act of 2025
Referred to the Committee on Natural Resources, and in addition to the Committee on Agriculture, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consid…
This bill (MONARCH Act of 2025) establishes a Western Monarch Butterfly Rescue Fund and a federal grant program to support conservation projects for the western population of monarch butterflies and other pollinators across western states.
It authorizes appropriations of $12.5 million per year (FY2026–2030) to the Fund and an additional $12.5 million per year (FY2026–2030) to support updating and implementing the Western Monarch Butterfly Conservation Plan through an agreement with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.
Eligible grant recipients include state and tribal governments, research institutions, nonprofits, and other entities with relevant expertise; Federal agencies may be partners but cannot be lead grantees.
Content-wise the bill is modest, narrowly targeted, and administratively straightforward, which increases its chances relative to large or divisive legislation. The principal barrier is that it only authorizes spending; actual enactment into law depends on future appropriations and floor schedules in both chambers. If adopted as a standalone authorization it could pass, but converting authorization into funded program and final enactment is less certain.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill establishes a clear, focused substantive policy framework to fund and support western monarch butterfly conservation through a new Treasury fund, grant authority, and implementation arrangements with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and it includes basic reporting and public disclosure provisions.
Adequacy and duration of funding: liberals want higher/longer funding; conservatives worry even modest spending.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesAuthorized spending increases federal outlays if appropriated (the bill authorizes $12.5 million/year to the Fund plus…
- Federal agenciesCritics may argue the program duplicates or overlaps with existing federal, state, and NGO conservation programs, poten…
- Targeted stakeholdersThe authorization is time-limited (FY2026–2030) and funding levels may be insufficient to reverse long-term declines gi…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Adequacy and duration of funding: liberals want higher/longer funding; conservatives worry even modest spending.
A mainstream liberal observer would likely view the bill positively as a targeted, science-based response to a clear conservation emergency.
They would note that the bill directs federal resources toward habitat restoration, tribal and community engagement, and supports pollinator ecosystems that benefit biodiversity and agriculture.
They may urge stronger or longer-term funding and linkages to broader measures (e.g., pesticide regulation, climate resilience).
A centrist/moderate would generally favor the bill as a targeted, time-limited federal investment to address a specific environmental crisis, while emphasizing the need for accountability and cost-effectiveness.
They would appreciate the grant-based approach, involvement of states, tribes, and non-federal partners, and the transparency requirements.
They would want clearer metrics, anti-duplication safeguards, and firm oversight to ensure measurable results and efficient use of taxpayer funds.
A mainstream conservative would likely be skeptical of new federal spending and wary of federal involvement, but some may find the bill acceptable because it uses modest, time-limited appropriations and relies on grants to non-federal partners rather than imposing broad regulation.
Concerns would center on fiscal prudence, federal overreach, and potential impacts on private landowners and agricultural operations.
If assured the program is non-regulatory, respects property rights, and includes strict oversight, some conservatives might be mildly supportive, while others may oppose any increase in federal conservation spending.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Content-wise the bill is modest, narrowly targeted, and administratively straightforward, which increases its chances relative to large or divisive legislation. The principal barrier is that it only authorizes spending; actual enactment into law depends on future appropriations and floor schedules in both chambers. If adopted as a standalone authorization it could pass, but converting authorization into funded program and final enactment is less certain.
- Whether authorizing language will be matched by appropriations in future budget or appropriations bills; authorization does not guarantee funding.
- Committee scheduling, potential amendments, or the addition of unrelated riders that could make the bill more controversial and affect floor consideration.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Adequacy and duration of funding: liberals want higher/longer funding; conservatives worry even modest spending.
Content-wise the bill is modest, narrowly targeted, and administratively straightforward, which increases its chances relative to large or…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill establishes a clear, focused substantive policy framework to fund and support western monarch butterfly conservation through a new Treasury fund, grant authority, and…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.