HRES-864-119
Referred to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Michael Guest (R-MS)
What it does
This resolution would formally express the House of Representatives' recognition of the service and sacrifice of American veterans on Veterans Day, 2025. It would call on the American public to observe Veterans Day in honor of veterans' contributions. The resolution makes no changes to law, creates no programs, and appropriates no funds.
Who benefits
The approximately 15.8 million living U.S. veterans (as of 2023) who receive symbolic recognition from Congress. Veterans service organizations that gain visibility through congressional acknowledgment of their advocacy role. Families of veterans, who are explicitly recognized in the resolution's text.
Who is hurt
No group is materially harmed by this resolution. As a purely symbolic measure, it produces no regulatory burden, spending reallocation, or legal change that would negatively affect any identifiable group.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that formal congressional recognition of veterans' service is a meaningful and appropriate act of national gratitude, particularly given that over 41 million Americans have served in the military since the country's founding. They contend that resolutions like this reinforce the social compact between the nation and those who served, and complement the substantive policy work Congress does on veterans' benefits and services.
Opponents argue
Opponents might argue that symbolic resolutions consume limited congressional floor time and resources without producing any tangible improvement in veterans' lives, such as addressing documented gaps in VA healthcare access, mental health services, or benefits processing backlogs. They could contend that meaningful recognition of veterans is better demonstrated through substantive legislation than through non-binding proclamations.