SRES-657-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S1545-1546)
Sponsored by Tammy Duckworth (D-IL)
What it does
This resolution would formally commemorate the 30th anniversary of Taiwan's first direct presidential election, held on March 23, 1996. It would express the Senate's support for Taiwan's democratic institutions and reaffirm U.S. policy commitments under the Taiwan Relations Act, the Three Communiques, and the Six Assurances. The resolution explicitly states it does not authorize the use of military force.
Who benefits
Taiwan's government and people, who receive a formal symbolic endorsement of their democratic system from the U.S. Senate. U.S. policymakers and diplomats who favor a strong public posture toward Taiwan. Defense and foreign policy advocacy organizations that support closer U.S.-Taiwan ties. Indo-Pacific allies (Japan, South Korea, Australia, Philippines) who may view the resolution as a signal of U.S. regional commitment.
Who is hurt
The People's Republic of China, which opposes international recognition of Taiwan's separate political identity and may view the resolution as a provocation. U.S. businesses with significant operations in mainland China that could face diplomatic or commercial blowback. Advocates of a more cautious U.S. posture toward the Taiwan Strait who argue that symbolic gestures raise tensions without adding security. U.S. diplomats managing the broader U.S.-China relationship, who may face increased friction.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Taiwan's 30-year record of free elections, peaceful transfers of power, and protected civil liberties makes it one of Asia's most successful democracies, and that the Senate has a long tradition of formally recognizing such milestones. They contend that reaffirming the Taiwan Relations Act and Six Assurances sends a clear, bipartisan signal — the resolution has sponsors from both parties — that U.S. policy toward Taiwan is stable and consistent, which itself contributes to deterrence and regional stability.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions like this one can inflame cross-strait tensions without providing Taiwan any concrete security benefit, potentially provoking Beijing into economic or military responses that harm both Taiwan and U.S. interests. They contend that the resolution's language — calling Taiwan's democracy "a great strategic strength for the free world" — goes beyond commemoration into political positioning, and that such framing risks complicating the carefully managed ambiguity that has kept the Taiwan Strait stable for decades.