SRES-769-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S2768)
Sponsored by Rick Scott (R-FL)
What it does
This resolution would express the Senate's formal commemoration of the 49 people killed in the June 12, 2016 attack at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, on the 10th anniversary of the event. It would offer condolences to victims' families, honor survivors, pledge resolve against terrorism and hate, and express gratitude to first responders. As a simple Senate resolution, it would carry no legal force, create no new law, and appropriate no funds.
Who benefits
Families and loved ones of the 49 victims, who receive formal congressional recognition of their loss. Survivors of the attack, who are formally honored. Members of the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities, who are acknowledged as targeted groups. First responders and emergency medical personnel who responded to the attack. The Orlando, Florida community broadly.
Who is hurt
No group is materially harmed by this resolution. As a purely commemorative measure with no legal or fiscal effect, it does not impose costs, restrictions, or obligations on any party.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that formal congressional recognition of the Pulse attack affirms the Senate's commitment to standing against terrorism and hate-motivated violence. They contend that marking the 10th anniversary with an official resolution honors the memory of 49 victims and provides meaningful acknowledgment to surviving families and communities who continue to grieve, consistent with Congress's longstanding tradition of commemorating national tragedies.
Opponents argue
Opponents might argue that symbolic resolutions consume limited Senate floor and committee time without producing any enforceable policy outcome, and that the most meaningful response to mass violence is substantive legislation rather than commemorative statements. They could contend that without accompanying policy action, such resolutions risk substituting symbolic gestures for concrete measures that could address the conditions that enabled the attack.