HR-7764-118
Became Public Law No: 118-144.
Sponsored by Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL)
What it does
This law creates an eight-member commission to study whether the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia should be transferred to the Smithsonian Institution. The commission must deliver a report to Congress and the President within two years of its first meeting, covering the museum's collections, finances, educational impact, and operating costs, along with a fundraising plan and legislative recommendations. The commission dissolves 30 days after submitting its final report.
Who benefits
The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History, which gains a federally funded study of a potential path to Smithsonian membership and the financial stability that could accompany it. The Jewish American community, whose history and culture could receive broader national recognition through Smithsonian affiliation. Educators, researchers, and students who study antisemitism and Jewish American history, who could gain expanded access to the museum's collections. Philadelphia-area residents and tourists who visit the museum could benefit if Smithsonian affiliation brings increased funding and programming.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the commission's operating costs, though those costs are expected to be modest given the commission's narrow, time-limited scope. Existing Smithsonian institutions and their stakeholders, who could face increased competition for Smithsonian funding and administrative resources if a transfer ultimately occurs. Philadelphia's local economy could be negatively affected if Smithsonian affiliation shifts the museum's primary identity away from its local roots. Other cultural institutions seeking Smithsonian affiliation may face a higher bar or longer wait if this process sets a new procedural precedent.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Weitzman Museum preserves a vital and underrepresented chapter of American history, and that Smithsonian affiliation would give Jewish American heritage the same national recognition afforded to other communities through institutions like the National Museum of African American History and Culture. They contend that the museum's documented financial difficulties — including a 2020 bankruptcy filing — make federal support a practical necessity to preserve irreplaceable collections for future generations. Supporters also argue that at a time of rising antisemitism in the United States, elevating the museum's profile and educational reach through the Smithsonian's national platform would strengthen governmental and civic efforts to study and counter hate. The commission structure, with bipartisan appointments from all four congressional leaders, ensures the study process is deliberate, balanced, and accountable to Congress before any transfer decision is made.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding the Weitzman Museum to the Smithsonian Institution would set a precedent for federalizing privately established cultural institutions, potentially opening the door to similar requests from countless other museums and heritage organizations competing for limited federal resources. They contend that the Smithsonian already faces significant funding and maintenance backlogs across its existing facilities, and absorbing a new institution — along with its financial liabilities — could strain the system and divert resources from museums already under its umbrella. Critics may also argue that the museum's financial difficulties, including its prior bankruptcy, raise questions about whether federal affiliation is an appropriate remedy for what is fundamentally a private institution's fiscal management challenges. Finally, some may question whether singling out one ethnic or religious community's history for this level of federal study and potential support raises equal protection concerns relative to other communities whose cultural institutions have not received similar consideration.