[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1003 Introduced in House (IH)]
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119th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1003
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that corporations
should commit to utilizing the benefits of women in boards of directors
and other senior management positions.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
January 15, 2026
Mr. Beyer submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the
Committee on Education and Workforce
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that corporations
should commit to utilizing the benefits of women in boards of directors
and other senior management positions.
Whereas Catalyst, a non-profit and non-partisan organization, found in their
2020 report entitled ``Women on Corporate Boards'' that women are 56
percent of the labor force, yet only account for 30 percent of board
directors of S&P 500 companies, and another Catalyst report entitled
``Women CEOs of the S&P 500'' found that women accounted for only 6
percent of all CEOs in 2020;
Whereas a McKinsey report entitled ``Women in the Workplace'' published in 2021,
found that women of color continue to have even lower representation at
every level of corporate employment and leadership;
Whereas the Sadie Collective's paper titled ``Why are Black Women Missing from
Corporate Leadership?'' published in November 2020 showed that the
number of Black women completing degrees in economics, finance,
accounting, and math fields is declining, which are often fields
associated with corporate leadership;
Whereas such study found that measures to remove barriers to the pipeline of
corporate leadership for Black women in male-dominated fields include
access to information, earlier education, and exposure to female
mentors;
Whereas The American Economic Association's study entitled ``AEA Profession
Climate Survey: Final Report'' published in September 2019 found that
women, especially Black women, had to take the most measures to avoid
possible harassment, discrimination and unfair treatment, hindering
efforts to climb the corporate ladder;
Whereas an Egon Zehnder study entitled ``Global Board Diversity Tracker: Who's
Really on Board?'' published in December 2020, showed that companies
with women on executive teams and boards of directors perform better
financially;
Whereas such study showed that women directors contribute to important
corporate-level outcomes because they play roles as leaders and mentors,
as well as indirect roles as symbols of opportunity for other women, and
inspire those women to achieve and stay with their corporations;
Whereas such study found that more recognition of the valuable contribution of
women directors to corporation value is needed;
Whereas such study showed that corporations need a critical mass of at least 3
women serving on boards of directors with average membership of 11
individuals to access the benefits of women in powerful positions for
overall organizational performance and prevent the negative impacts of
tokenism on leadership teams; and
Whereas such study found that corporations with women serving as directors tend
to be somewhat risk-averse and carry less debt, on average, compared to
corporations with no women directors, and that net income growth for
such corporations was also higher: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives
that--
(1) the citizens of the United States have a significant
stake in promoting robust, sustainable economic growth;
(2) such growth will be strengthened and accelerated by the
ever-fuller inclusion of women in the United States workforce,
at all levels of corporate management; and
(3) corporations in the United States should undertake a
commitment to ever-fuller utilization of the talents, skills,
and work ethic of women on boards of directors and in other
senior management positions.
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