[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1375 Introduced in House (IH)]

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119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
H. RES. 1375

 Reaffirming the importance of the United States promoting the safety, 
health, and well-being of refugees and displaced persons in the United 
                      States and around the world.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                             June 18, 2026

Mr. Lieu (for himself, Mr. Cohen, Ms. Omar, Ms. Moore of Wisconsin, Mr. 
Garcia of Illinois, Ms. Ansari, Ms. Norton, Mr. Moulton, Ms. Tlaib, Mr. 
    Espaillat, Mr. Pocan, Ms. DeGette, Mr. Johnson of Georgia, Ms. 
Barragan, Mr. DeSaulnier, Mr. Menefee, Ms. McClellan, Mr. McGovern, Ms. 
  Balint, Mr. Amo, Mr. Nadler, Mr. Kennedy of New York, Ms. McCollum, 
  Mrs. Ramirez, Mr. Jackson of Illinois, Ms. Brownley, Ms. Garcia of 
  Texas, Ms. Chu, Ms. Jayapal, Mrs. Watson Coleman, Ms. Clarke of New 
 York, Ms. Mejia, Mr. Davis of Illinois, Ms. Leger Fernandez, and Mr. 
  Carter of Louisiana) submitted the following resolution; which was 
 referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the 
Committee on the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined 
 by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as 
        fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned

_______________________________________________________________________

                               RESOLUTION


 
 Reaffirming the importance of the United States promoting the safety, 
health, and well-being of refugees and displaced persons in the United 
                      States and around the world.

Whereas June 20, 2026, is an international day designated by the United Nations 
        as ``World Refugee Day'', to recognize refugees around the globe and 
        celebrate the strength and courage of people who have been forced to 
        flee their homes to escape conflict or persecution due to their race, 
        religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular 
        social group;
Whereas July 28, 2026, is the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Convention 
        relating to the Status of Refugees, held at Geneva on July 28, 1951, a 
        landmark achievement that for the first time codified a definition of 
        the term ``refugee,'' established the foundational principle of non-
        refoulement, and outlined the rights of refugees and the legal 
        obligations of nation states to protect such rights;
Whereas, in 2026, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (referred to 
        in this preamble as ``UNHCR'') reported that as of the end of 2025--

    (1) there were more than 117,000,000 displaced people who had been 
forced from their homes worldwide, including more than 41,600,000 refugees, 
9,000,000 asylum seekers, and 68,700,000 internally displaced persons;

    (2) 68 percent of all refugees worldwide were hosted in low- and 
middle-income countries and fewer than 1 percent of refugees are ever 
resettled;

    (3) 70 percent of all refugees worldwide were in protracted situations, 
meaning they have been forcibly displaced from their country of origin for 
five years or more;

    (4) approximately 1,300,000 Syrian refugees returned to Syria at the 
end of 2024 displaced by years of conflict;

    (5) nearly 2,000,000 internally displaced Syrians had returned to their 
area of origin, but the country remains affected by one of the largest 
humanitarian crises in the world, despite positive political changes and 
renewed hope for returns following the fall of the Assad regime at the end 
of 2024;

    (6) approximately 8,900,000 Ukrainians were forcibly displaced as a 
result of the ongoing invasion of Ukraine by Russia, including 5,200,000 
Ukrainian refugees, an increase from 2024;

    (7) there were an estimated 3,700,000 Afghan refugees around the world, 
representing a decrease from 2024 in part due to restrictive government 
policies toward Afghans in certain refugee-hosting countries, which placed 
vulnerable Afghans, including women and girls, at risk of persecution;

    (8) approximately 11,900,000 people were forcibly displaced due to the 
ongoing conflict in Sudan including 9,100,000 internally displaced persons, 
representing the largest internal displacement crisis globally, and an 
estimated 2,800,000 refugees who have fled to neighboring countries, many 
of whom are women or children;

    (9) there were more than 6,000,000 people displaced from Venezuela 
globally, the majority of whom were hosted in Latin America;

    (10) more than 1,400,000 people were forcibly displaced in Haiti due to 
widespread violence, representing a nearly 40 percent increase from 2024;

    (11) more than 90 percent of the population of Gaza (approximately 
2,000,000 people) had been internally displaced since October 2023;

    (12) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one of the largest 
internal displacement crises continued with 3,900,000 people newly 
displaced due to the ongoing conflict even as 3,600,000 people returned to 
their area of origin, often involuntarily, due to the forced closure of 
internal displacement settlements by the de facto authorities;

    (13) an estimated 1,200,000 Rohingya refugees resided in Bangladesh, 
constituting the largest refugee settlement in the world, with thousands 
more Rohingya refugees residing in nearby countries; and

    (14) in the Sahel region, which encompasses Burkina Faso, Mali, and 
Niger, an estimated 3,900,000 people were forced to flee their homes;

Whereas the vast majority of people fleeing persecution do not have access to 
        refugee resettlement and instead must seek protection through asylum or 
        other humanitarian relief;
Whereas welcoming people from around the world who have been oppressed and 
        persecuted is a tenet of our Nation and the United States is home to a 
        diverse population of refugees and immigrants who contribute to the 
        economic strengths and cultural richness of our communities;
Whereas since seeking asylum is a protected right under United States domestic 
        and international law, the United States is legally obligated to 
        contribute to the maintenance of a humane and functioning international 
        asylum system;
Whereas the principle of non-refoulement is also a central tenet of the United 
        States refugee and asylum systems and thousands of people living in the 
        United States who immigrated from countries around the world would be 
        subject to harm if they were deported to their countries of origin or to 
        third countries due to widespread conflict or persecution in such 
        countries;
Whereas the United States Refugee Admissions Program, which was established in 
        1980--

    (1) is a lifesaving pillar of global humanitarian efforts;

    (2) advances United States national security and foreign policy goals; 
and

    (3) supports regional host countries;

Whereas Executive Order 14163 (90 Fed. Reg. 8459; relating to realigning the 
        United States Refugee Admissions Program), which was issued on January 
        20, 2025, indefinitely suspending all refugee admissions to the United 
        States, remains in place and continues to put at risk the lives and 
        well-being of refugees fleeing violence and persecution, including 
        Iranians, Afghans, Burmese Rohingya, Sudanese and Somalis;
Whereas President Trump set the Fiscal Year 2026 Presidential Determination on 
        Refugee Admissions at a record low of 7,500 individuals, prioritizing 
        the resettlement of Afrikaners from South Africa, such that Afrikaners 
        made up over 95 percent of arrivals this fiscal year as of May 2026;
Whereas President Trump's decision to increase the Fiscal Year 2026 Presidential 
        Determination on Refugee Admissions by 10,000, exclusively for the 
        resettlement of Afrikaners from South Africa, is a politically motivated 
        and unjust decision that excludes those most in need of protection 
        including tens of thousands of already-approved and thoroughly vetted 
        refugees who have fled persecution;
Whereas the Trump administration has failed to implement the Lautenberg-Specter 
        Program, which Congress re-authorized for Fiscal Year 2026, to screen 
        and admit religious minorities in the former Soviet Union and Iran who 
        are facing persecution and discrimination, including 15,000 religious 
        minorities in Iran;
Whereas Presidential Proclamation 10949 and Presidential Proclamation 10998 
        cemented the suspension of the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa program, 
        paused family reunification, and compounded the ban on refugee 
        admissions, denying refugees and asylum seekers the chance to seek safe 
        refuge in the United States;
Whereas the Trump administration's sweeping cuts to United States foreign 
        assistance have reduced support to refugees abroad, including through 
        the reduction in food rations to refugees in camps, threatening to 
        destabilize fragile situations:
Whereas as of June 2026, the ongoing refugee admissions ban remains in effect;
Whereas--

    (1) more than 100,000 refugees who had been conditionally approved for 
refugee status by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services remain 
indefinitely stranded;

    (2) more than 22,000 refugees who were considered ``ready for 
departure'' and who had completed all necessary medical checks, security 
screenings, and interviews remain indefinitely stranded;

    (3) more than 12,000 refugees who had flights booked to travel to the 
United States, many of whom had begun to move and sell belongings in 
preparation for their resettlement, remain indefinitely stranded; and

    (4) over 800 Afghan allies, about half of whom are women and children, 
evacuated to the Camp As Sayliyah base in Qatar are refugees, who have a 
clear path to resettle in the United States but remain indefinitely 
stranded;

Whereas the Trump Administration actions to detain dozens of approved refugees, 
        who underwent years of vetting prior to approval, thousands of miles 
        from home to re-examine their refugee cases, only to determine once 
        again that they were properly approved for refugee status, was a 
        violation of our nation's laws and commitments to refugees;
Whereas the Constitution of the United States protects all individuals within 
        its jurisdiction, regardless of citizenship status, and should afford 
        noncitizens in the United States, including refugees and asylum seekers, 
        full due process before deportation or other adverse action affecting 
        their protection;
Whereas attempts to suspend refugee admissions, bar individuals based on 
        religion or nationality, or implement blanket asylum bans and 
        indiscriminate removal or detention policies are inconsistent with the 
        Constitution of the United States, the Refugee Act of 1980 (Public Law 
        96-212), our treaty obligations, and established international human 
        rights norms;
Whereas resettlement is an essential part of a comprehensive strategy to respond 
        to refugee crises, promote regional stability, and strengthen United 
        States national security;
Whereas resettlement to the United States is available for the most vulnerable 
        refugees who undergo rigorous security vetting and medical screening 
        processes;
Whereas the United States supports the efforts of the UNHCR to increase 
        protection for, and the global resettlement of, LGBTQI+ refugees 
        overseas;
Whereas women and girls have an increased risk of sexual violence, exploitation, 
        and trafficking while they are traveling to seek safe living conditions;
Whereas according to a study by the Department of Health and Human Services, 
        between 2005 and 2019, refugees and asylum seekers in the United States 
        contributed an estimated $581,000,000,000 in total revenue across all 
        levels of government;
Whereas most refugees integrate and quickly become self-sufficient members of 
        their respective communities by joining the workforce, paying taxes, 
        supporting local commerce, helping to address labor demand in critical 
        industries, and creating new jobs; and
Whereas robust funding for international and domestic protection and assistance 
        for refugees and other displaced populations bolsters United States 
        national security, foreign policy, economic, and humanitarian interests: 
        Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
            (1) recognizes the urgency to establish and follow 
        comprehensive, fair, and humane policies to address forced 
        migration and refugee challenges;
            (2) reaffirms the bipartisan commitment of the United 
        States to promote the safety, health, and well-being of 
        millions of refugees and asylum seekers, including the 
        education of refugee children and displaced persons fleeing 
        war, persecution, or torture in search of protection, peace, 
        hope, and freedom;
            (3) recognizes the many individuals who have risked their 
        lives working, either individually or on behalf of 
        nongovernmental organizations or international agencies, such 
        as UNHCR, to provide lifesaving assistance and protection for 
        people around the world who have been displaced from their 
        homes;
            (4) reaffirms the imperative to fully restore United States 
        asylum protections enshrined in the Refugee Act of 1980 (Public 
        Law 96-212) by rejecting harmful bans and restrictions that 
        limit refugees' access to protections and due process at the 
        United States border;
            (5) reaffirms the importance of the United States Refugee 
        Admissions Program as a critical tool of the United States 
        Government--
                    (A) to strengthen national and regional security; 
                and
                    (B) to encourage international solidarity with host 
                countries;
            (6) calls upon President Trump to lift the indefinite 
        suspension of the United States Refugee Admissions Program and 
        to fully restore resettlement to the United States; and
            (7) calls upon the Secretary of State, the Secretary of 
        Homeland Security, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, 
        and the United States Ambassador to the United Nations--
                    (A) to uphold the United States international 
                leadership role in responding to displacement crises 
                with humanitarian assistance and to strengthen its 
                leadership role in the protection of vulnerable refugee 
                populations that endure gender-based violence, torture, 
                human trafficking, persecution, violence against 
                religious minorities, forced conscription, genocide, 
                and exploitation;
                    (B) to work in partnership with the international 
                community to find solutions to existing conflicts, 
                prevent new conflicts from emerging, and tackle the 
                root causes of involuntary migration;
                    (C) to increase support for the efforts of the 
                UNHCR and advance the work of nongovernmental 
                organizations to protect refugees and asylum seekers 
                regardless of their country of origin, race, ethnicity, 
                or religious beliefs;
                    (D) to increase efforts to alleviate pressures, 
                through humanitarian and development assistance, on 
                frontline refugee host countries that absorb the 
                majority of the world's refugees, while effectively 
                advocating for refugee well-being, including access to 
                education and livelihoods;
                    (E) to meaningfully include refugees and displaced 
                populations in creating and achieving the policy 
                solutions affecting them;
                    (F) to respond to the global refugee crisis by 
                meeting robust refugee admissions goals;
                    (G) to implement the United States pledges made at 
                the Global Refugee Forum held in Geneva in December 
                2023 to expand refugee protection;
                    (H) to address barriers faced by refugees with 
                disabilities by ensuring accessible infrastructure and 
                the availability of disability-related services and 
                social protection schemes; and
                    (I) to reaffirm the goals of ``World Refugee Day'' 
                and reiterate the United States strong commitment to 
                protect refugees and asylum seekers who live without 
                adequate material, social, or legal protections.
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