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SECURE Data Act: Republicans Propose Federal Privacy Law Preempting State Laws

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Summary

House Committee on Energy and Commerce Republicans introduced the discussion draft SECURE Data Act on April 22, 2026, proposing a federal comprehensive privacy standard that would preempt state laws including the CCPA and CPRA. The bill omits a private right of action and requirements for data protection impact assessments, data protection officers, or universal opt-out mechanisms. Key new provisions include an FTC-managed data broker registration, a Department of Commerce safe harbor program, and classification of children's data alongside health and geolocation as sensitive data. The bill was introduced jointly with a companion GLBA reform measure.

Why this matters

Technology companies and data brokers operating across multiple states should monitor this proposal closely. If enacted as drafted, the federal standard would eliminate the need to comply with varying state privacy regimes, but the absence of a private right of action and universal opt-out mechanisms represents a significant reduction in individual consumer remedies compared to the CCPA and CPRA. Businesses currently investing in state-specific compliance programs should preserve documentation of those investments while tracking legislative progress, as the preemption provision could render those programs unnecessary under a federal floor model.

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GovPing monitors IAPP Privacy News for new data privacy & cybersecurity regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 44 changes logged to date.

What changed

The SECURE Data Act would establish a federal comprehensive privacy standard preempting the existing patchwork of state privacy laws including the CCPA, CPRA, and similar statutes. The bill grants common data subject access rights but notably omits a private right of action, data protection impact assessment requirements, DPO mandates, and universal opt-out mechanisms. It introduces novel concepts including FTC-administered data broker registration, a safe harbor for companies adhering to Department of Commerce-approved codes of conduct, and Global CBPR recognition for cross-border data flows. Children's data under age 13 would be classified as sensitive data alongside health and geolocation information.

Companies operating under current state privacy regimes should monitor this proposal's progress, as federal preemption would significantly alter compliance obligations. The absence of a private right of action means enforcement would remain with state attorneys general and the FTC, unlike the more litigious environment created by state laws. Technology companies, data brokers, and businesses with significant online operations should track both the SECURE Data Act and the companion GLBA reform bill introduced simultaneously.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.


Published

22 April 2026

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The gears are turning once again on U.S. Congress' debate over potential comprehensive privacy legislation. The latest attempt comes courtesy of House Committee on Energy and Commerce Republicans, who introduced the draft Securing and Establishing Consumer Uniform Rights and Enforcement over Data Act following more than a year of stakeholder consultation.

In line with the bill's title, Energy and Commerce Republicans' proposal would preempt comprehensive state privacy laws by creating a federal standard using common data subject access rights and general provisions from the current state patchwork. However, the attempt at uniformity comes with departures from what is being done in the states, including omitted and nuanced provisions.

The initial draft does not include a private right of action or requirements for data protection impact assessments, data protection officers or universal opt-out mechanisms. Among the notable novel concepts raised by the bill are a data broker registration managed by the Federal Trade Commission, a safe harbor program for companies adhering to Department of Commerce-approved code of conduct, and data belonging to children under age 13 being treated as sensitive data alongside health and geolocation data.

"This bill establishes clear, enforceable protections so that Americans remain in charge of their own data and companies are held accountable for its safe keeping," Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., and Rep. John Joyce, R-Penn., said in a joint statement. "We look forward to working with our colleagues to build support for this bill and advance data privacy protections fit for our 21st century economy."

In a statement to the IAPP, Energy and Commerce Ranking Member Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said the new bill "protects corporations and their bottom line, not people's privacy."

"We should be protecting the little guy with a bill that empowers consumers, not one that pre-empts consumer protections at the behest of Big Tech. It seems to me that Republicans have lost the plot on efforts to pass a strong national privacy bill," he added.

The bill was crafted without input from Energy and Commerce Democrats, a notable departure from recent congressional privacy debates. The American Data Privacy Protection Act and the American Privacy Rights Act were both bipartisan, bicameral efforts that stalled at different points during their respective considerations.

IAPP Managing Director, Washington, D.C., Cobun Zweifel-Keegan, CIPP/US, CIPM, and Westin Fellow David Botero offered a legal analysis of the bill, including its scope and key provisions.

The SECURE Data Act is a product of the committee's Data Privacy Working Group that convened February 2025 to address, according to the group's request for information, "the challenge of providing clear digital protections for Americans" that has been "compounded by the fast pace of technological advancement and the complex web of state and federal data privacy and security laws, which in some cases create conflicting legal requirements." Guthrie and Joyce noted the group's stakeholder dialogue sought to "reset the discussion on comprehensive data privacy, taking wide ranging input from stakeholders and crafting a consensus bill that protects the privacy and security of Americans' personal data."

While drafting the SECURE Data Act, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce debated children's privacy and online safety proposals. The proposed Children and Teens' Online Privacy Protection Act was among those bills, aiming to expand the scope and requirements of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. Energy and Commerce Democrats reportedly abandoned that bipartisan initiative over policy discrepancies.

The comprehensive bill was unveiled jointly with the House Committee on Financial Services' discussion draft to reform financial privacy law under the Gramm Leach Bliley Act. In the joint committee statement, Financial Services Chair French Hill, R-Ark., noted the Guidelines for Use, Access, and Responsible Disclosure of Financial Data Act aims to modernize the GLBA, which was drafted "in a technology-neutral fashion that has adapted well to the changes in technology and types of consumer data that have developed since 1999."

"Our bill minimizes data collection and disclosures; allows customers and former customers to request access to their financial data held by a financial institution; allows former customers of a financial institution to request deletion of their data; and requires a financial institution to receive a consumer's affirmative opt-in consent before sensitive personal information can be disclosed," Hill said.

The reception

Workday Vice President and Chief Privacy Officer Barbara Cosgrove, CIPP/E, welcomed the efforts on the latest comprehensive bill, noting the lack of a federal floor on privacy risks "a fragmented digital economy where a person's privacy rights depend on their zip code."

"By setting out protections based on roles, formalizing the oversight of the free flow of data, recognizing proven programs like Global Cross Border Privacy Rules, and embracing established security certifications, this draft establishes the necessary foundation for a national standard that we look forward to helping refine into a permanent, workable solution," she said.

The SECURE Data Act recognizes participation in Global CBPRs under its proposed code of conduct with respect to data flows. Cosgrove said that inclusion helps to promote mechanisms that are "vital tools for fostering customer trust at scale."

The Association of National Advertisers issued a statement to the IAPP highlighting the commonality the bill carries to existing state privacy laws, which in turn reflects "an approach that's endorsed by state elected officials across the political spectrum." The group also hailed the bill as a "common-sense standard" that "protects all Americans without jeopardizing the 29 million U.S. jobs supported by advertising."

Lisa Hone served as Energy and Commerce Democrats' chief counsel to minority members of the Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Commerce during the APRA debates two years ago. She told the IAPP the Republican tact on the new framework is "an enormous and disappointing step away" from past bipartisan work toward federal privacy protections.

"The Republicans' new bill would give Big Tech a nationwide license to collect vast amounts of consumers' personal information and use it however they please, including to feed unregulated artificial intelligence models, while preempting state laws that provide real limits on the collection, use, and sharing of consumers' data," she said. "That result is wholly inconsistent with previous calls from both sides of the aisle for meaningful federal privacy protections for all consumers."

Center for Democracy and Technology Privacy and Data Project Director Eric Null also highlighted the SECURE Data Act's departures from the ADPPA and APRA, indicating those proposals "responded better to people's actual needs and expectations." While the new bill proposes requirements to minimize data collection to what is "adequate, relevant, and reasonably necessary," Null does not see the stringency behind the measures to uphold those processing standards.

"The SECURE Data Act fails to change the equation, letting companies hide behind cookie banners and lengthy terms of service rather than establishing meaningful privacy protections, and including easily-exploited loopholes," he said.

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Contributors:

Joe Duball

News Editor

IAPP

Tags:

Law and regulation U.S. federal regulation Privacy

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
IAPP
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Legislative
Joint with
Energy and Commerce Financial Services
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Proposed
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Financial advisers Healthcare providers
Industry sector
5112 Software & Technology
Activity scope
Federal privacy legislation State law preemption Data broker regulation
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Data Privacy
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Cybersecurity

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