HR-1329-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would establish the Smithsonian American Women's History Museum as an official museum within the Smithsonian Institution. It would authorize the planning, design, construction, and operation of a physical museum dedicated to collecting, preserving, and displaying artifacts and stories related to the history of women in America. The museum would be governed by a board and funded through a combination of federal appropriations and private donations.
Who benefits
The general public, who would gain access to a federally supported institution dedicated to women's history. Educators, students, and researchers who study women's contributions to American history. Women's history organizations and advocates who have long sought a permanent national institution. Tourism industries in the Washington, D.C. area. Museum professionals and historians who would gain new employment and research opportunities. Donors and philanthropic organizations interested in women's history.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of federal funding for construction and operations. Competing institutions or museums that may lose donors, visitors, or funding to the new museum. Other Smithsonian museums that may compete for limited federal appropriations. Organizations that oppose expanding the federal government's role in cultural institutions. Potentially, groups who believe the museum's curatorial choices may not represent all perspectives on women's history.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that women make up more than half the U.S. population yet have no dedicated national museum on the National Mall, a gap that leaves a significant portion of American history underrepresented in the country's premier public cultural institution. They contend that the Smithsonian already houses museums dedicated to African American history, American Indian history, and other specific communities, establishing a clear precedent for this type of institution, and that a women's history museum would serve millions of visitors and preserve irreplaceable historical artifacts.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a museum organized around a single demographic group risks fragmenting American history into siloed narratives rather than integrating women's contributions into the broader national story already told across existing Smithsonian museums. They contend that the federal government should not be in the business of selecting which identity groups merit their own taxpayer-funded institution, and that the significant construction and operating costs — potentially hundreds of millions of dollars — could be better directed toward existing underfunded Smithsonian collections or left to private philanthropic efforts.