The bill passed in the House under suspension of the rules, which showed broad bipartisan support, and it now heads to the Senate. If it clears that stage and reaches President Donald Trump’s desk, boxing will move closer to a system in which United Boxing Organizations can exist alongside the traditional sanctioning-body route. That does not mean the old order disappears. It means the sport could start operating on two tracks.
One would remain the familiar version of boxing, where fighters work through the WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO structure, chasing rankings, mandatories, and title fights through the usual mix of promoters, networks, and sanctioning bodies. The other would give companies the chance to build UFC-style leagues with exclusive contracts, internal titles, and their own rankings, which is why the vote changed things.
The easiest mistake is to treat this as a story about boxing finally choosing order over disorder, but that is not what happened. Boxing did not settle its old argument. It opened a second road, while fighters can still remain in the old structure if they choose.
Promoters can continue working as they have, with sanctioning bodies also carrying on as usual. The difference is that they no longer stand alone as the only recognised route, and that puts pressure on everybody.
For TKO and Zuffa, the door is now open to build their own structure inside boxing, with contracts, rankings, and titles all operating under one setup, something that did not exist in this form before.
The rest of the sport continues as it is, with sanctioning bodies still in place, promoters operating as they have, and fighters able to follow that same route, but now with another option sitting alongside it rather than replacing it.










