SCONRES-34-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S2479)
Sponsored by Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD)
What it does
This concurrent resolution would express Congress's sense that reducing firearms violence and strengthening public safety should be national priorities as the United States marks its 250th anniversary in 2026. It would formally recognize victims and commend law enforcement, public health professionals, and community violence intervention workers. It would also express support for data collection on violent crime, community-based violence prevention strategies, victim services funding, and policies that "uphold constitutional rights" — but it would not create any new law, mandate any spending, or establish any enforceable requirement.
Who benefits
Survivors of firearms violence and their families, who would receive formal congressional recognition. Community violence intervention organizations and practitioners, who would gain symbolic congressional endorsement. Law enforcement agencies, public health professionals, and victim services providers whose work would be formally commended. Advocates on all sides of the firearms policy debate who could cite the resolution's language in future legislative arguments.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct, enforceable harm from this resolution, as it creates no legal obligations. Opponents of expanded firearms regulation may object to the resolution's framing and its potential use as a rhetorical foundation for future binding legislation. Firearms manufacturers, retailers, and owners' rights organizations may view the resolution's language as a precursor to more restrictive policy proposals.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Congress has a responsibility to formally acknowledge the scale of firearms violence — an average of 125 deaths per day, according to figures cited in the resolution — and that symbolic resolutions play a meaningful role in setting national priorities and honoring victims. They contend that the resolution's explicit inclusion of constitutional rights language demonstrates a balanced approach, and that endorsing evidence-informed strategies like community violence intervention reflects broad, bipartisan public safety consensus.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the resolution's "whereas" clauses selectively present statistics and frame firearms as a public health crisis in ways that presuppose specific policy conclusions, potentially serving as a political messaging vehicle rather than a genuine statement of shared values. They contend that the resolution's language — including calls for "robust funding" and "expanded investment" — signals a legislative agenda that could infringe on Second Amendment rights, and that Congress's time is better spent on binding legislation than non-enforceable declarations.