HRES-444-119
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
What it does
This resolution would express the sense of the House of Representatives that Americans should observe Memorial Day 2025 as a day of remembrance for U.S. service members who died in military service. It calls on the public to honor those who died and frames that observance as an expression of respect for democracy and the sacrifices of U.S. and allied forces. The resolution has no binding legal effect and creates no new law, program, or spending.
Who benefits
Families and survivors of fallen U.S. service members, who receive formal congressional recognition of their loved ones' sacrifice. Veterans' organizations and memorial institutions that promote public awareness of military service. Allied nations whose fallen soldiers are also acknowledged in the resolution's text.
Who is hurt
No group is materially harmed by this resolution. As a purely symbolic, non-binding measure, it imposes no costs, restrictions, or obligations on any individual, organization, or government entity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Congress has a long tradition of formally recognizing national days of remembrance, and that a House resolution provides an official, bipartisan expression of gratitude to the more than one million Americans who have died in military service. They contend that public commemoration reinforces civic values and provides meaningful acknowledgment to Gold Star families who have lost loved ones.
Opponents argue
Opponents might argue that symbolic resolutions consume limited congressional floor time and resources that could be directed toward substantive legislation addressing the material needs of veterans and military families, such as healthcare, housing, or survivor benefits. They could contend that meaningful honor for fallen service members is better demonstrated through policy action than through non-binding proclamations.