Reese's Law This bill requires the Consumer Product Safety Commission to establish product safety standards with respect to batteries that pose an ingestion hazard (e.g., button cell or coin batteries). Specifically, consumer products with these batteries must include (1) a warning label instructing consumers to keep the batteries out of the reach of children, and (2) a battery compartment that prevents access to the batteries by children who are six years of age or younger. Additionally, such b…
MONEY ON THIS BILL
Top donor industries among YEA voters vs NAY voters · lobbying activity in affected industries
⬆ YEA voters — top donor industries
No data yet.
⬇ NAY voters — top donor industries
No data yet.
◎ Lobbying activity by issue area
“Pts” = sum of per-member industry donation scores (% of total donations from that industry, summed across the group). Higher means that industry funds a larger share of contributions for that voting bloc.
VOTE BREAKDOWN
No recorded floor vote
Most bills never receive a recorded roll-call vote — they're referred to committee and don't advance to the floor. The sponsor and funding context on this page still tells you who is behind it and what industries have a stake.
SPONSORS

Robin L. Kelly
D-IL · Primary
17 COSPONSORS
BIPARTISAN





+11 more (see dot grid above)
SPONSOR FUNDING
Top industries funding Kelly
TRAIL AI
HR 5313, known as Reese's Law and sponsored by Representative Robin L. Kelly of Illinois, addresses law enforcement training and accountability standards. The bill was signed into law during the 117th Congress. Vote data for this legislation is not currently available.
Based on public voting records. Does not imply causation.
TIMELINE
DATA SOURCES
Bill data: Congress.gov · 117th–119th Congress (2021–present)
Vote records: House Clerk / Senate · 2021–present
Reflects public records. Does not imply causation.