HRES-1261-119
Referred to the House Committee on Small Business.
Sponsored by Brad Finstad (R-MN)
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for designating May 3–9, 2026, as "National Small Business Week." It would formally honor the contributions of small businesses and entrepreneurs across the United States. The resolution is purely symbolic — it does not create law, appropriate funds, or establish any new federal program or requirement.
Who benefits
Small business owners and entrepreneurs who receive formal congressional recognition. Trade associations and advocacy groups representing small businesses, who may use the designation for promotional purposes. Communities and local chambers of commerce that organize events around the designation. The Small Business Administration, which has historically used the week for outreach and awards programs.
Who is hurt
No group is directly or materially harmed by this resolution. There is no regulatory burden, spending reallocation, or policy change that would negatively affect any identifiable group.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that small businesses — numbering more than 36 million nationwide and supporting over 62 million jobs — are the backbone of local economies and deserve formal congressional recognition. They contend that continuing a tradition established by every president since 1963 reinforces bipartisan commitment to entrepreneurship and provides a platform for communities to celebrate local economic contributors.
Opponents argue
Opponents could argue that simple commemorative resolutions consume limited congressional floor time and resources without producing any tangible policy outcome for small businesses. They might contend that the same legislative energy could be directed toward substantive measures — such as changes to small business lending, tax policy, or regulatory burden — that would produce measurable benefits rather than symbolic recognition.