HRES-863-119
Referred to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Jasmine Crockett (D-TX)
What it does
H. Res. 863 is a simple resolution — a formal expression of the sense of the House of Representatives. It would honor the military service and sacrifices of veterans from Texas, noting that Texas has the largest veteran population of any state (approximately 1.6 million). The resolution would also reaffirm Congress's commitment to working with the Department of Veterans Affairs to ensure veterans receive timely care, benefits, and support for their transition to civilian life. It does not create, modify, or fund any program.
Who benefits
Texas veterans and their families, who receive formal congressional recognition. Women veterans in Texas (over 203,000), who are specifically acknowledged as the largest such population in any state. Minority veterans, who are recognized as comprising roughly one-third of Texas's veteran population. Veteran-owned businesses in Texas, which are noted as leading the nation in number. Broadly, all veterans may benefit symbolically from renewed congressional attention to transition challenges, mental health, homelessness, and employment.
Who is hurt
No group is directly or materially harmed by this resolution. As a purely commemorative measure with no binding legal effect, it does not impose costs, restrictions, or obligations on any individual, organization, or agency. Congressional floor and committee time spent on the resolution represents a minor opportunity cost.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Texas's 1.6 million veterans — the most of any state — have borne a disproportionate share of the nation's military burden, with over 25,000 Texan lives lost across major conflicts from World War II through Operation Iraqi Freedom. They contend that formal recognition draws public and legislative attention to persistent, documented challenges facing veterans, including a national veteran suicide rate of roughly 17 deaths per day and over 32,000 homeless veterans nationwide, potentially building political will for future substantive action.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that commemorative resolutions consume limited congressional time and floor resources without producing any enforceable policy change, funding, or structural improvement for veterans. They contend that the documented challenges cited in the resolution — veteran suicide, homelessness, and difficult civilian transitions — demand binding legislation and appropriations, not symbolic statements, and that resolutions of this kind may substitute the appearance of action for actual legislative progress on veterans' needs.