SRES-677-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S1826)
Sponsored by Richard Durbin (D-IL)
What it does
This resolution would express the formal sense of the Senate that the President should prioritize seeking the release of five named individuals — Pastor Jin Mingri, Pastor Gao Quanfu, his wife Pang Yu, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, and Jimmy Lai — who are detained by the People's Republic of China. It would direct the President to raise their cases during future engagements with Chinese President Xi Jinping. As a Senate resolution, it would not carry the force of law, create binding obligations, or appropriate any funds.
Who benefits
The five named detainees and their families, who would receive formal U.S. legislative attention to their cases. Religious freedom and human rights advocacy organizations that have campaigned for these individuals. The broader population of U.S.-designated wrongfully detained persons held by China, who may benefit from increased diplomatic pressure. Press freedom advocates, given Jimmy Lai's status as a media figure.
Who is hurt
U.S. businesses and diplomatic interests that depend on stable U.S.-China relations may face friction if China views the resolution as an escalation. The resolution could also complicate broader bilateral negotiations on trade, security, or other issues by adding public pressure on the executive branch's diplomatic approach. Chinese government officials may view it as interference in domestic legal proceedings.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Congress has a legitimate role in signaling foreign policy priorities, and that public, bipartisan legislative pressure has historically aided the release of wrongfully detained Americans and foreign nationals. They contend that the five individuals represent documented cases of religious persecution and suppression of free expression — values the U.S. has long championed internationally — and that raising their cases directly with Xi Jinping elevates them above routine diplomatic channels.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that sense-of-the-Senate resolutions on specific detainee cases can undermine the executive branch's flexibility to pursue quiet diplomacy, which has historically been more effective at securing releases than public pressure. They contend that singling out five individuals by name in legislation may complicate broader U.S.-China negotiations on issues affecting far more people, and that the President already has full constitutional authority — and arguably the exclusive responsibility — to manage such engagements without congressional direction.