HRES-1186-119
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
Sponsored by Jamie Raskin (D-MD)
What it does
This resolution would express the formal opinion of the House of Representatives that President Trump, Special Envoy Steven Witkoff, and all federal officials must comply with the Foreign Emoluments Clause of the Constitution. It would call on those officials to turn over to the U.S. Treasury any payments received from the United Arab Emirates or other foreign governments, and to divest from business interests connected to foreign governments. As a "sense of the House" resolution, it would carry no binding legal force and would create no new law, penalties, or enforcement mechanism.
Who benefits
Members of Congress seeking a formal, on-the-record statement about emoluments compliance. Watchdog organizations and ethics advocates who would gain a congressional endorsement of their position. The general public, to the extent that foreign-influence concerns are addressed. Competing domestic businesses that do not have foreign government ties and argue they face an uneven playing field.
Who is hurt
President Trump and his business interests, which could face increased public and political scrutiny. Special Envoy Steven Witkoff, who is named specifically and could face reputational consequences. Other federal officials with foreign business ties who would be publicly called out. The resolution could also be seen as prejudging ongoing legal or political disputes before facts are fully established.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Foreign Emoluments Clause explicitly prohibits federal officeholders from accepting payments or gifts from foreign governments without congressional consent, and that business dealings with UAE sovereign wealth funds or state-linked entities may constitute exactly such prohibited emoluments. They contend that Congress has both the authority and the responsibility to put its institutional position on record, and that the resolution reinforces a constitutional norm that protects against foreign influence over U.S. policy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that "sense of the House" resolutions carry no legal weight and amount to political messaging rather than substantive governance, particularly given that courts have repeatedly declined to adjudicate emoluments disputes on standing and justiciability grounds. They contend that the resolution prejudges complex legal questions — including what transactions legally constitute "emoluments" — that remain unsettled, and that Congress has other tools, such as binding legislation or formal oversight hearings, if it genuinely believes a constitutional violation is occurring.
Constitutional context
The Foreign Emoluments Clause (Art. I, §9, cl. 8) prohibits any person holding federal office from accepting any present, emolument, office, or title from a foreign state without congressional consent. The scope of the clause — including what transactions qualify as "emoluments" and who has standing to enforce it — has not been definitively resolved by the Supreme Court; multiple emoluments lawsuits during Trump's first term were dismissed on standing or mootness grounds without reaching the merits.
Checks and balances
The legislative branch would gain a formal expressive record on this issue, but no branch gains or loses actual enforcement power; the resolution creates no new authority, mandate, or penalty, leaving enforcement of the Emoluments Clause to existing legal and political mechanisms.
Historical precedent
Multiple emoluments lawsuits filed during Trump's first term (2017–2021), including CREW v. Trump and Maryland v. Trump, were dismissed on standing or mootness grounds without courts ruling on the merits of what constitutes a prohibited emolument.