SRES-761-119
Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S3024)
Sponsored by Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
What it does
This resolution designates June 23, 2026, as "Social Media Harms Victim Remembrance Day" to honor individuals harmed by social media. It urges individuals, communities, organizations, and platforms to observe the day through remembrance ceremonies and educational events. It also calls on government agencies and nonprofits to develop initiatives addressing social media harms, and requests that the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies to the President, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Chair of the Federal Trade Commission.
Who benefits
Families and survivors of individuals harmed by social media-related incidents such as cyberbullying, harassment, drug exposure, or suicide. Advocacy organizations focused on online safety and digital well-being, who gain a formal congressional platform. Mental health professionals and researchers whose work on social media harms receives implicit congressional recognition. Youth-focused nonprofits that may use the designation to organize awareness events.
Who is hurt
Social media companies whose platforms are implicitly associated with harm in the resolution's framing, potentially affecting public perception. No group faces a direct legal or financial burden, as the resolution is purely symbolic and creates no mandates, penalties, or spending.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that tens of millions of American teenagers are active social media users, with over 90% using these platforms and many spending nearly 5 hours daily on them, making congressional acknowledgment of documented harms — including links to self-harm, suicidal ideation, and drug overdose deaths — both timely and necessary. They contend that a formal day of remembrance elevates the experiences of victims and survivors, fosters public awareness, and signals congressional commitment to online safety without imposing any regulatory burden.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a purely symbolic resolution does nothing concrete to protect young people from documented social media harms, and that congressional time and attention would be better directed toward enforceable legislation. They contend that the resolution's one-sided framing — cataloguing harms without acknowledging social media's documented benefits to youth mental health, community-building, and access to support resources — may oversimplify a complex issue and could be used to build political momentum for future regulations that raise First Amendment concerns under Moody v. NetChoice (2024).