SRES-728-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2283; text: CR S2282)
Sponsored by Richard Durbin (D-IL)
What it does
This resolution expresses the sense of the Senate that the President should prioritize securing the release of six named individuals — Pastor Jin Mingri, Pastor Gao Quanfu, Pang Yu, Jimmy Lai, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, and Ekpar Asat — 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 sense-of-the-Senate resolution, it does not carry the force of law and does not compel any specific executive action.
Who benefits
The six named detainees and their families stand to benefit most directly. Broader communities represented by the detainees — Christian religious communities in China, Hong Kong pro-democracy advocates, and Uyghur and other Muslim minority groups — may benefit from increased diplomatic attention. U.S. human rights organizations and advocates who have campaigned for these individuals would see their causes elevated. Indirectly, other foreign nationals detained by China whose cases may receive spillover diplomatic attention could also benefit.
Who is hurt
The resolution could complicate broader U.S.-China diplomatic and trade negotiations if China views the pressure as an obstacle to engagement. U.S. businesses and industries dependent on stable U.S.-China relations may face indirect risk if the resolution contributes to diplomatic friction. Chinese government officials and state interests would face increased international scrutiny over the detentions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Senate has a responsibility to use its voice to advocate for individuals whose detentions — including a Catholic pastor, a Hong Kong media executive, and Uyghur Americans — represent documented patterns of religious and political persecution. They contend that consistent, bipartisan congressional pressure has historically contributed to the release of detained Americans and foreign nationals, and that silence signals tacit acceptance of these practices.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that sense-of-the-Senate resolutions on specific detainees can undermine quiet diplomatic efforts already underway, as public pressure may cause the Chinese government to dig in rather than negotiate. They contend that naming individuals in a legislative resolution may reduce the President's flexibility to pursue back-channel negotiations, and that the resolution's non-binding nature means it carries symbolic cost without guaranteed benefit to the detainees.