On March 13, 1997, Representative Cox introduced H.R. 1054, titled the “Internet Tax Freedom Act,” in the U.S. House, and Senator Wyden introduced it in the Senate, where it was designated S. 442. The bill received hearings in both chambers. Cox introduced two updated versions: H.R. 3849, in May 1998; and H.R. 4105, in June 1998, the latter of which passed the U.S. House unanimously in July 1998. Three months later, in October 1998, the Senate passed the companion bill, S. 442, by a vote of 96–2. The Internet Tax Freedom Act was then added to the omnibus appropriations bill for that year, and signed into law by President Clinton as Titles XI and XII of P.L. 105–277 on October 21, 1998. It is codified at 47 U.S.C. § 151, note. Prior to the expiration of the law's original ten-year term,
Congress extended the Act on multiple occasions. President
Barack Obama signed one extension on September 19, 2014, until December 11, 2014; another on December 16, 2014, until October 1, 2015; and a third on September 30, 2015, which extended the Act through December 11, 2015. Meanwhile, on July 15, 2014, the
House passed H.R. 3086, the
Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act, designed to bring an end to the need for extensions by making the Internet Tax Freedom Act permanent. When the Senate took no action on the bill prior to the expiration of the 113th Congress, it was reintroduced as H.R. 235 in the 114th Congress, and the
House unanimously approved it on June 9, 2015. The bill was then added to the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015, which passed the
House on December 11, 2015
President Obama signed it on February 24, 2016, finally making the Internet Tax Freedom Act permanent after nearly two decades. ==U.S. Supreme Court Litigation==