SRES-757-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2670; text: CR S2666)
Sponsored by Bill Cassidy (R-LA)
What it does
This Senate resolution designates June 11, 2026, as "National Seersucker Day," every subsequent Thursday through the last Thursday in August 2026 as "Seersucker Thursday," and June 2026 as "Seersucker Appreciation Month." It encourages Senators to wear seersucker on those days and invites the American public to do the same. It also encourages local governments to partner with clothing industry organizations to promote seersucker.
Who benefits
Cotton, linen, and silk farmers — particularly the roughly 3,500 cotton family farms in Georgia mentioned in the bill's preamble. Seersucker clothing manufacturers, retailers, and tailors who may see increased consumer interest. Textile industry workers broadly. Historians and cultural preservationists interested in American fashion heritage. Senators and staff who enjoy the longstanding congressional seersucker tradition.
Who is hurt
This resolution carries no binding legal force and imposes no mandates, costs, or restrictions on any party. No group faces a direct material harm. Competing apparel manufacturers or retailers could theoretically see a marginal, symbolic disadvantage, though any such effect would be negligible.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the resolution celebrates a genuine piece of American cultural and textile heritage with roots in the 19th-century South, while also drawing attention to domestic cotton farming — an economically significant agricultural sector. They contend that the longstanding bipartisan congressional tradition of Seersucker Thursday, revived in 2014 with cooperation across party lines, demonstrates that the designation has broad, good-natured appeal and fosters camaraderie in an often-divided institution.
Opponents argue
Opponents could argue that the Senate's limited floor time is better spent on substantive legislation addressing pressing national issues, and that symbolic resolutions of this kind represent a misallocation of institutional resources. They might further contend that using the Senate's formal resolution process to promote a specific fabric or clothing style — however lighthearted — sets a precedent for trivial use of congressional authority that could crowd out more consequential business.