HR-8575-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Julie Johnson (D-TX)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of State to maintain and expand existing public-private partnerships — called "Women's Councils" — that promote women's employment, entrepreneurship, and education in South and Central Asia. It would create a new unit within the State Department's Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, led by a Special Advisor for Women's Economic Security with the rank of Ambassador, appointed by the Secretary of State. The bill would also require the Secretary to submit a report to Congress within one year describing implementation steps, partnership status, and economic impact data.
Who benefits
Women in South and Central Asian countries (particularly in Pakistan, India, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan) who may gain access to employment, entrepreneurship resources, mentorship, and education. U.S. businesses and universities that participate in the Women's Councils and gain access to new markets and networks. Civil society organizations in the region that receive resources or partnerships. U.S. diplomatic personnel who gain a clearer institutional mandate and dedicated point of contact at relevant posts. Indirectly, families and communities in the region that may benefit from increased women's economic participation.
Who is hurt
State Department staff who may be assigned additional duties as designated points of contact at diplomatic posts without additional compensation or staffing. Competing foreign policy priorities that may receive less attention or resources if personnel are redirected. Organizations or programs focused on other regions that may face relative deprioritization. Taxpayers, to the extent that any future appropriations are directed toward implementation, though the bill itself does not authorize new spending.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that women's economic participation is a proven development multiplier — the bill's own findings cite research suggesting gender parity in employment could increase South Asia's GDP by 19 to 58 percent — and that leveraging public-private partnerships maximizes impact without direct taxpayer cost. They contend the bill codifies and institutionalizes existing, bipartisan-supported programs (including those implementing the Women, Peace, and Security Act of 2017) into durable law, protecting them from administrative discontinuity and giving Congress meaningful oversight through the required annual report.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new State Department unit and a Special Advisor position with Ambassador rank adds bureaucratic layers that may duplicate existing offices — such as the Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues — without clear evidence the current structure is inadequate. They contend that the bill's geographic focus on South and Central Asia may divert diplomatic attention and resources from other regions with comparable or greater need, and that the absence of any appropriations ceiling or performance benchmarks limits Congress's ability to hold the program accountable for results.