Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
Last progress June 4, 2025 (8 months ago)
Introduced on June 4, 2025 by Mary E. Miller
Directs the House to state that the traditional married mother-and-father family is the foundation of a healthy society, withdraws recognition of Pride Month, and expresses support for creating a "Family Month" to emphasize the importance of the traditional nuclear family. The measure is a formal statement of the House's position and does not create new funding, legal rights, or deadlines.
The preamble states that the traditional nuclear family is the foundation of a healthy society.
The preamble states that mothers and fathers play a crucial and irreplaceable role in the upbringing of their children.
The preamble states that the best environment for children to thrive is a home with a married mother and father.
The preamble states that roughly half of all marriages in the United States end in divorce.
The preamble states that many young people are opting to delay or forgo marriage and starting a family.
Primary effects are symbolic and rhetorical. Families and parents are placed at the center of the resolution's message, which may influence public debate and how some House events or statements are framed. The LGBTQIA+ community is directly affected in a symbolic way because the House withdraws recognition of Pride Month and criticizes Pride displays; this may affect visibility and federal-level ceremonial recognition. Children could be indirectly affected through shifts in public messaging about family norms. There are no new legal or financial effects on federal, state, or local governments, nor on benefit programs or tax rules—so agencies, employers, and service providers face no new duties. The main impacts are on public discourse, constituent relations, and symbolic recognition rather than on law or policy implementation.