HRES-377-118
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Michael McCaul (R-TX)
What it does
This resolution calls on the Russian government to immediately release Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who was detained in March 2023. It also directs all U.S. executive branch officials to raise Gershkovich's case in every interaction with Russian government counterparts. The resolution extends its call to Paul Whelan, Marc Fogel, Vladimir Kara-Murza, and all other U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents wrongfully detained in Russia or abroad, and expresses sympathy to their families.
Who benefits
Evan Gershkovich (detained Wall Street Journal journalist), Paul Whelan (former U.S. Marine detained in Russia), Marc Fogel (American teacher detained in Russia), Vladimir Kara-Murza (U.S. lawful permanent resident and Russian opposition figure detained in Russia), and all other U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents currently wrongfully detained abroad. Their families would also benefit from the symbolic expression of congressional solidarity and any diplomatic pressure that results.
Who is hurt
No domestic group is directly or materially harmed by this resolution. The Russian government is the target of diplomatic pressure, which could complicate broader U.S.-Russia diplomatic relations. Some analysts argue that public congressional pressure can reduce negotiating flexibility for U.S. diplomats, potentially making prisoner negotiations more difficult.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Congress has a constitutional duty to speak on behalf of American citizens wrongfully imprisoned by foreign governments, and that unified, bipartisan congressional pressure strengthens the executive branch's hand in diplomatic negotiations. They contend that Gershkovich's detention — the first arrest of an American journalist in Russia on espionage charges since the Cold War — represents a direct attack on press freedom and sets a dangerous precedent for journalists worldwide. Supporters also argue that directing executive branch officials to consistently raise these cases ensures the issue remains a priority across all diplomatic channels, not just high-level summits, maximizing the chance of a successful resolution.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that non-binding resolutions like this one are largely symbolic and do little to produce concrete results for detained Americans, potentially giving the public a false sense of congressional action. They contend that public legislative pressure can actually undermine sensitive diplomatic negotiations by signaling to Russia that the U.S. is politically invested, reducing American leverage and making a quiet, back-channel resolution less likely. Some also argue that mandating executive branch officials to raise specific cases in all interactions with Russia could constrain diplomatic flexibility, interfering with the executive's constitutionally assigned authority to conduct foreign policy on its own terms.