SRES-791-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S3217)
Sponsored by Jacky Rosen (D-NV)
What it does
This resolution would formally condemn China's Ethnic Unity and Progress Law, which took effect July 1, 2026, and which the resolution characterizes as institutionalizing coercive assimilation of ethnic and religious minorities. It would reaffirm the 2021 State Department genocide determination regarding Uyghurs, call on the President to evaluate targeted sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act against individuals responsible for implementing the law, urge the State Department to coordinate monitoring with allied governments, and call on China to repeal the law and resume dialogue with the Dalai Lama. As a Senate simple resolution (S.Res.), it would express the sense of the Senate only and would not carry the force of law.
Who benefits
Tibetan, Uyghur, Mongolian, Hui Muslim, and Christian communities inside China who may gain symbolic international attention and diplomatic pressure. Members of those diaspora communities living in the United States who face alleged Chinese transnational repression. U.S. citizens and organizations that could be targeted under the law's extraterritorial provisions. Taiwan and its government, which the resolution notes could be affected by the law's extraterritorial reach. Human rights advocacy organizations that document abuses. Allied governments (EU, Canada, Japan, Australia, UK) whose coordinated monitoring role would be formally encouraged.
Who is hurt
The resolution carries no binding legal force, so direct harms are limited. U.S.-China diplomatic and trade relations could be strained if China views the resolution as an escalation, potentially affecting American businesses operating in China and U.S. exporters. Chinese government officials and entities could face increased scrutiny for Global Magnitsky sanctions, though the resolution only calls on the President to "evaluate and consider" — not impose — such sanctions. Organizations or individuals engaged in cultural or academic exchange programs with Chinese institutions may face a more adversarial diplomatic environment.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that China's Ethnic Unity and Progress Law represents a codified escalation of policies the U.S. government has already formally labeled genocide, and that congressional silence would signal tacit acceptance. They point to the law's extraterritorial provisions — which purport to authorize Chinese legal action against U.S. citizens who "undermine ethnic unity" — as a direct threat to American sovereignty and free expression, making this a domestic security concern, not merely a foreign human rights matter. They further argue the resolution builds on bipartisan precedent, including the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 and the Tibetan Policy and Support Act of 2020, and aligns the Senate with the European Parliament and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, both of which have already condemned the law.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution carries no enforcement mechanism and may provide the appearance of action without producing measurable improvement for affected communities, while simultaneously complicating diplomatic channels that could yield more substantive results. They contend that the resolution's call for Global Magnitsky sanctions evaluations and its explicit stance on the Dalai Lama succession — a matter China considers an internal religious and political affair — could harden Chinese positions and reduce U.S. leverage on broader strategic priorities including trade, Taiwan, and nuclear nonproliferation. Critics may also argue that the resolution's framing relies heavily on contested characterizations of Chinese domestic law, and that unilateral congressional condemnations without allied coordination risk being dismissed internationally as political theater rather than effective human rights diplomacy.