In a somewhat serious attempt to address the OP, I checked congress.gov to see what bills Garland Hale "Andy" Barr IV, my Republican Congressman, has sponsored.
HR 790 - "This bill eliminates provisions that fund the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) using transfers from the earnings of the Federal Reserve System. The transfers under current law permit the CFPB to be funded outside of the annual appropriations process, and this bill brings the CFPB into the regular process."
Could be good governance, could be a way to restrict funding to the CFPB, an agency whose mission is to reduce opportunities to fleece the financially unsophisticated.
HR 1193 - "This bill expands research on valvular heart disease and its treatment. This disease is caused by damage to or disease affecting any valve that controls blood flow in the heart."
Barr's wife died unexpectedly last year at the age of 39 from this condition.
HR 1479 - "This bill prohibits the use of federal funds to rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action—commonly known as the Iran nuclear deal—unless the President commits to submit any successor agreement to the Senate for advice and consent as a treaty."
Could be good governance, more likely a way to prevent the US from rejoining.
HR 1543 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To provide authorities to prohibit the provision of services by social media platforms to certain individuals and entities on the Specially Designated Nationals List and senior officials of governments of a state sponsor of terrorism."
Arguably unconstitutional.
HR 1729 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To amend the Federal Reserve Act to prohibit certain financial service providers who deny fair access to financial services from using taxpayer funded discount window lending programs, and for other purposes."
Effectively prevents banks from denying loans to legal businesses they or a large fraction of their customers find objectionable (refers to "Operation Choke Point", which was a DOJ program that "investigated banks in the United States and the business they did with firearm dealers, payday lenders, and other companies believed to be at a high risk for fraud and money laundering.")
HR 2561 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To require the appropriate Federal banking agencies to establish a 3-year phase-in period for de novo financial institutions to comply with Federal capital standards, to provide relief for de novo rural community banks, and for other purposes."
This might actually be an example of what the OP wanted. It establishes a 3-year phase in period "to meet any Federal capital requirements that would otherwise be applicable to the financial institution" and notes in the findings
(3) A November 2019 report by the Federal Reserve System found that 44 counties in the U.S. were “deeply affected” by trends in bank closures and consolidation (i.e., had fewer than 10 branches in 2012 and lost at least 50 percent of them by 2017).
(4) 89 percent of the deeply affected counties were rural.
(5) Rural counties deeply affected by branch closures had higher poverty rates, lower median income, and a higher share of their population were African American compared to all rural communities.
HR 3012 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To establish a Higher Education Initiative in the Office of Private Sector of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and for other purposes."
Targets "suspected incidents of individuals participating in federally funded research as agents of a foreign government in institutions of higher education and National Academies." "Foreign government" is later defined as (basically) China.
HR 3802 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To amend the FAST Act to add activities relating to the extraction, recovery, or processing of certain materials to the definition of a critical project, and for other purposes."
Barr apparently wants to see if we can extract rare earth elements, "microfine carbon", or other "critical minerals" (broadly defined) from coal and the many forms of waste left behind by coal mining. Smells like pseudoscientific claptrap to me - if there were any hope of that I would have thought industry or the researchers they fund would have discovered it by now.
HR 3265 - No congress.gov summary yet available. Summary in bill text says "To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to apply current income tax bracket breakpoints to capital gains brackets."
Increases the amount of long-term capital gains on which zero tax is owed by $100 or $200 (depending on filing status). Increases the amount of long-term capital gains to which the 15% rate applies (and thus decreases the amount of long-term capital gains to which the 20% rate applies) by $47,600, $74,200, or $121,000 (depending on filing status).
Will no doubt be appreciated by all the poor folks in Kentucky's 6th district struggling to make ends meet on $500K in cap gains income...
H. Con. Res. 36 - "This concurrent resolution establishes the Joint Select Committee on the Events and Activities Surrounding China's Handling of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus to investigate and report to Congress and the executive branch specified information related to the coronavirus (i.e., the virus that causes COVID-19) pandemic."
I rather expect we'll get this (whether from Barr's resolution or one of the many others no doubt filed by Congressfolk of every persuasion)...
Probably won't get anything else. Barr has been in Congress since 2013 and has sponsored (i.e., introduced) 92 bills. 3 have become law (the "1921 Silver Dollar Coin Anniversary Act", a bill "to amend title 38, United States Code, to reduce the credit hour requirement for the Edith Nourse Rogers STEM Scholarship program of the Department of Veterans Affairs", and a bill "to designate the health care system of the Department of Veterans Affairs in Lexington, Kentucky, as the "Lexington VA Health Care System" and to make certain other designations.")