SRES-796-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S3219)
Sponsored by Edward Markey (D-MA)
What it does
This resolution would express the Senate's support for immigrant communities as the United States approaches its 250th anniversary. It would call on federal, state, and local governments to expand programs that help immigrants access language services, employment assistance, legal support, and naturalization services. It would also encourage collaboration with community organizations, nonprofits, and faith institutions to provide integration services, and would urge increased spending on equity and inclusion initiatives for immigrants and refugees.
Who benefits
Immigrant communities broadly, including lawful permanent residents, naturalized citizens, refugees, asylum seekers, and unauthorized immigrants. Nonprofit organizations and community groups that serve immigrant populations, who would receive symbolic congressional backing. Faith institutions and advocacy organizations involved in immigrant integration. Naturalization service providers. Immigrants with limited English proficiency who face barriers to employment and civic participation.
Who is hurt
This is a non-binding resolution with no direct legal or fiscal effect, so no group faces a direct material harm. Critics of expanded immigration services may object to the Senate lending its formal endorsement to these positions. Taxpayers in jurisdictions that increase spending in response to the resolution's urging could bear indirect costs, though the resolution creates no spending mandate.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that immigrant communities have historically driven American economic growth, cultural vitality, and civic life, and that the 250th anniversary is an appropriate moment for the Senate to reaffirm those contributions. They contend that documented barriers — including limited English proficiency, restricted access to legal services, and narrowing pathways to citizenship — prevent millions of residents from fully participating in American society, and that a formal Senate statement encourages the policy attention and community investment needed to address those gaps.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the resolution's "whereas" clauses contain politically charged characterizations — such as criticizing the "current Administration" by name — that make it a partisan statement rather than a neutral commemoration, undermining its credibility as a bipartisan anniversary recognition. They contend that urging governments to increase spending on equity and inclusion initiatives without specifying criteria or accountability measures amounts to an open-ended endorsement of contested policy priorities, and that a 250th anniversary resolution should focus on shared national history rather than active immigration policy debates.