S-4790-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Tim Kaine (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would establish the Esther Coopersmith Award at the Department of State, an annual performance award for Civil Service or Foreign Service members who have made meaningful contributions to advancing women's participation in peace, security, and conflict-prevention efforts. It would also amend the Foreign Service Act of 1980 to add "the rights of women and girls" alongside existing criteria such as freedom of religion. Award recipients would be required to present their work virtually to senior diplomatic conferences and entry-level Foreign Service training courses, and the Secretary of State would be required to submit an annual report to Congress describing recipients' efforts. The bill includes a 5-year sunset provision.
Who benefits
Civil Service and Foreign Service employees whose work on women's peace and security issues gains formal institutional recognition and career visibility. The Office of Global Women's Issues, which would administer the award and gain a higher profile. Women and girls in conflict-affected regions whose issues would receive greater attention within U.S. diplomatic training and strategy. Entry-level Foreign Service officers who would receive structured exposure to women, peace, and security work. Organizations and foreign governments aligned with the Women, Peace, and Security Act of 2017 framework.
Who is hurt
Diplomats working in other thematic areas (e.g., trade, counterterrorism, human rights broadly) who do not receive equivalent formal recognition, potentially creating perceived internal hierarchies. The Department of State's administrative staff who would bear the workload of administering the award, managing the review panel, supporting travel to global security conferences, and producing annual congressional reports. Taxpayers who would bear the costs of award administration and recipient travel, though the fiscal impact is likely modest. Competing award programs within the State Department that may receive less attention or resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Women, Peace, and Security Act of 2017 — signed with bipartisan support and implemented across multiple administrations — established a clear U.S. national security interest in women's participation in conflict resolution, yet lacks a formal mechanism to recognize and replicate successful diplomatic work in this area. They contend that the bill directly addresses a documented gap: the UN Secretary General's 2025 report found a record 676 million women and girls living near deadly conflict, and institutionalizing recognition of effective diplomacy would incentivize more of it, strengthen training pipelines, and generate lessons-learned reporting that improves future U.S. strategy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new named award and its associated bureaucratic infrastructure — a review panel of Assistant Secretaries and Chiefs of Mission, mandatory virtual presentations, annual congressional reports, and funded travel to global security conferences — adds administrative overhead to a State Department already managing resource constraints. They contend that existing performance evaluation and award systems within the Foreign Service are sufficient to recognize this work, and that singling out one thematic area for a dedicated award may distort diplomatic priorities or create the appearance of political favoritism toward a particular policy agenda rather than rewarding diplomatic excellence broadly.