No it's just a matter of time. Both parties are aligned, for different reasons. The work of the various committees addressing the "De minimus package problem" are complete and half a dozen bills are ready to sail to easy victory right after the election. No one wants to piss of voters by Temu announcing everything's 20% more expensive because they have to comply with the new strict rules.
CBP has been putting the pieces into place for a couple of years, and appear to be using shipments from India pharma to test these new enforcement methods on, as you can see seizures have gone way, way up to the point many vendors are forced to route through other countries.
A few months ago they banned half of dozen large Chinese package consolidators (from participating in the expedited clearance program where their containers bypass customs inspection, and now have to sit for months at a CBP facility) for isolated violations of the rules they'll be enforcing with an iron fist, costing them millions of dollars a day. They quickly lifted the bans before they went to court, but the message was clear. "You have a lot more to lose in legit business by accommodating the tiny percentage of shady packages you're including in your big containers filled with thousands of legal products."
What I didn't expect was last week's Presidential executive order to get the ball rolling prior to the new laws taking effect. Once the new $2 per small package "security fee" goes into effect, several billion $/yr, which will be exclusively used for more customs personell at the mail centers and inspection equipment, the "good times" will be over and drugs will have to go back to being smuggled like, well, drugs.