HRES-1278-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Jill Tokuda (D-HI)
What it does
This resolution would formally reaffirm the House of Representatives' support for the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, the three U.S.-China Joint Communiqués, and the Six Assurances given to Taiwan by the Reagan administration in 1982. It would express the House's continued backing for Taiwan's self-defense and opposition to any non-peaceful resolution of Taiwan's political status. As a simple House resolution (H. Res.), it would not carry the force of law, create new programs, or appropriate funds.
Who benefits
Taiwan's government and people, who would receive a public signal of continued U.S. political support. U.S. defense contractors that supply Taiwan with arms under the Taiwan Relations Act, whose business relationships are reinforced by this reaffirmation. U.S. businesses with commercial ties to Taiwan, particularly in the semiconductor and technology sectors, which benefit from regional stability signals. U.S. allies in the Indo-Pacific (Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Australia) who rely on U.S. commitment to the region as a deterrent. Members of Congress seeking a bipartisan record on Taiwan policy.
Who is hurt
The People's Republic of China, which views congressional expressions of support for Taiwan as interference in what it considers an internal matter, and which may respond with diplomatic or economic countermeasures. U.S. businesses operating in mainland China that could face retaliatory pressure if U.S.-China relations deteriorate following the resolution. Advocates for a more accommodating U.S. posture toward China who argue such resolutions reduce diplomatic flexibility. Diplomatic personnel who may face a more constrained negotiating environment with Chinese counterparts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Taiwan Relations Act has successfully preserved peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait for over 45 years, and that periodic congressional reaffirmation sends a clear deterrent signal to any party considering coercive action. They contend that Taiwan's transformation into a leading democracy and a critical node in global semiconductor supply chains — producing over 90% of the world's most advanced chips — makes U.S. commitment more strategically important than ever, and that bipartisan resolutions like this one reinforce the credibility of that commitment.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions like this one can inflame cross-strait tensions without adding any enforceable legal obligation, potentially provoking Beijing into more aggressive posturing while giving Taiwan false confidence in the scope of U.S. commitments. They contend that the resolution's explicit endorsement of the Six Assurances — particularly the pledge not to pressure Taiwan into negotiations — forecloses diplomatic options that may be necessary to manage an increasingly dangerous military balance in the Taiwan Strait, where China's naval and air capabilities have grown substantially since 1979.