HRES-1128-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Ryan Mackenzie (R-PA)
What it does
This resolution expresses the House of Representatives' support for fully funding the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). It states that Americans face greater risk during any lapse in DHS appropriations and formally thanks DHS employees for their service. As a simple resolution, it does not create law, appropriate funds, or impose any legal obligations.
Who benefits
DHS employees (approximately 260,000 workers) receive formal recognition of their service. Members of Congress who wish to signal support for DHS funding and border/homeland security operations benefit politically. DHS leadership may benefit from a public show of congressional support during appropriations debates.
Who is hurt
This resolution has no direct legal or financial effect on any group. No specific group faces a measurable negative consequence from its passage. Critics of DHS operations or spending levels may view the resolution as a one-sided statement, but it imposes no binding policy change.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that expressing congressional support for DHS sends a clear signal that lawmakers stand behind the agency's workforce and mission during a period of funding uncertainty. They contend that appropriations lapses create real operational gaps — delaying border security operations, cybersecurity responses, and disaster preparedness — and that a formal resolution puts Congress on record opposing those disruptions. Supporters also argue that publicly thanking DHS employees, many of whom work in dangerous or high-stress roles, is a meaningful gesture of institutional respect that costs nothing and reinforces morale during budget disputes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution expressing support for DHS funding is a symbolic gesture that does nothing to actually fund the agency or resolve the underlying appropriations disagreements. They contend that if Congress genuinely believed funding lapses endangered Americans, it would pass a budget or continuing resolution rather than a statement of sentiment. Critics may also argue that the resolution implicitly endorses current DHS operations and spending levels without any debate over the agency's effectiveness, accountability, or the appropriate scope of its activities — effectively using procedural symbolism to avoid substantive policy discussion.