S-504-116
Became Public Law No: 116-35.
What it does
The LEGION Act expands eligibility for American Legion membership to all veterans and active-duty servicemembers who served at any time after December 7, 1941, including those currently serving. Previously, only those who served during specific congressionally designated wartime periods could join. The bill also prohibits American Legion staff positions from being denied based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
Who benefits
Veterans and active-duty servicemembers who served during peacetime periods after December 7, 1941 — and who were previously ineligible for American Legion membership — would gain access to the organization's benefits, including networking, advocacy, social programs, and community resources. This group is estimated to number in the millions. Job applicants for American Legion staff positions who belong to protected classes (racial minorities, women, religious minorities) would gain explicit anti-discrimination protections.
Who is hurt
Existing American Legion members who preferred a smaller, wartime-service-only membership pool may see the organization's character or culture shift as a result of a significantly larger and more diverse membership base. A broader membership could also affect resource allocation, voting dynamics within the organization, and the relative influence of existing members. No financial harm to any specific group has been identified.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that restricting American Legion membership to wartime periods is an outdated distinction that fails to reflect the realities of modern military service. Since the end of World War II, millions of Americans have served honorably during peacetime, in conflicts not formally designated as wars, and in ongoing operations — yet they have been excluded from one of the nation's largest veterans' organizations. Expanding eligibility would allow the American Legion to represent the full breadth of the veteran community, strengthening its advocacy voice in Washington and extending its community programs to a larger population of those who served. The anti-discrimination provision aligns the organization's employment practices with federal civil rights standards already applicable to most employers, ensuring that the Legion's own staff reflects the diversity of the veterans it serves.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the American Legion was founded specifically to serve veterans of declared or congressionally recognized wartime service, and that this distinction carries meaningful historical and organizational significance. Dramatically expanding the eligible membership pool risks diluting the shared identity and mission that has held the organization together for over a century. Critics also contend that Congress should not use legislation to alter the membership criteria of a private veterans' organization, raising questions about the appropriate boundary between government authority and the autonomy of private civic associations. Some may further argue that peacetime veterans already have access to other organizations and that the Legion's unique wartime focus should be preserved as a matter of institutional integrity.