Bryan Steil is leading efforts to cut wasteful spending and lower costs for Wisconsin workers and families.
Cut wasteful spending and lower costs for Wisconsin workers and families.
Occurrences
He supports families by working for policies to lower costs and help families afford the things that they need.
Steil is working to lower costs by cutting wasteful government spending, unleashing American energy, and reducing regulatory costs.
In Congress, Steil is focused on bringing down costs for Wisconsin workers and families.
Evidence
Costs are too high. Reckless spending has caused prices for everyday goods and services to skyrocket. Bryan Steil is leading efforts to cut wasteful spending and lower costs for Wisconsin workers and families.
Bryan Steil (WI) is listed as a cosponsor on H.R. 6644, a bill whose full title says it is "A bill to increase the supply of housing in America, and for other purposes."
Roll Call 243 on passage of H.R. 3746, the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, shows "Steil Republican Wisconsin WI Aye."
Roll Call 385 on H.R. 5376, the Build Back Better Act, shows "Steil Republican Wisconsin WI Nay."
Assessments
Steil made actions consistent with the promise during his federal House tenure, including voting for the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, opposing major spending legislation, and cosponsoring housing-supply legislation aimed at cost pressures. However, the evidence shows advocacy, votes, and cosponsorship rather than a clearly delivered, attributable outcome that cut wasteful spending and lowered costs for Wisconsin workers and families. Because the promise is broad and outcome-based, these actions merit partial credit, not full delivery.
Steil took actions consistent with the promise, including voting for the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 to restrain federal spending growth, opposing a large spending bill, and cosponsoring housing-supply legislation aimed at cost pressures. However, the evidence does not show that wasteful spending was comprehensively cut or that costs for Wisconsin workers and families were materially lowered as an achieved outcome. This supports partial delivery rather than full delivery.