HRES-1366-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by James Walkinshaw (D-VA)
What it does
This resolution would formally express the House of Representatives' commemoration of the 30th anniversary of Taiwan's first direct presidential election, held on March 23, 1996. It would reaffirm U.S. commitment to the Taiwan Relations Act, the Three Joint Communiqués, and the Six Assurances as the foundational pillars of U.S.-Taiwan policy. The resolution includes an explicit rule of construction stating that nothing in it authorizes the use of military force.
Who benefits
Taiwan's government and people, who receive a formal expression of U.S. democratic solidarity. U.S. policymakers and diplomats who favor a strong symbolic U.S.-Taiwan relationship. Defense and security industries with interests in the Indo-Pacific region. Pro-democracy advocacy organizations. Taiwanese-American communities in the United States.
Who is hurt
U.S. officials and businesses seeking to maintain stable diplomatic or commercial relations with the People's Republic of China, which may view the resolution as provocative. U.S. companies with significant supply chain or market exposure in China that could face indirect diplomatic blowback. Advocates of a more cautious or ambiguous U.S. posture toward the Taiwan Strait who argue symbolic gestures raise tensions without adding security commitments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Taiwan's democratic transition — from martial law in 1987 to eight free and fair presidential elections — represents one of the most successful democratic transformations in modern history, and that the U.S. has a longstanding interest in affirming democratic governance globally. They contend that reaffirming the Taiwan Relations Act and Six Assurances sends a clear, bipartisan signal of U.S. resolve at a moment of heightened PRC military and economic pressure on Taiwan, reinforcing deterrence without escalating to a binding commitment.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions like this one can inflame cross-strait tensions without providing Taiwan any concrete security benefit, potentially provoking PRC responses — such as military exercises or economic pressure — that harm both Taiwan and U.S. interests in the region. They contend that the resolution's selective framing of U.S.-Taiwan policy, particularly its emphasis on "self-defense" support, risks muddying the deliberate strategic ambiguity that has kept the Taiwan Strait stable for decades, without the force of law or a treaty to back it up.