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Congress·In Committee·H.Res. 475

Supporting the designation of Family Month.

Family Month: Proposed National Recognition

This bill is currently in the early stages of the legislative process and is being reviewed by the House Committee on Education and Workforce. It is considered active, but no further meetings or votes have been scheduled for it yet.

Legislative Progress

House
Senate
President
Law
Very unlikely to pass

This is a symbolic resolution that does not change any laws. These types of proposals rarely move past the committee stage unless they have broad support from party leaders.

Key Points

  • This resolution asks the House of Representatives to officially support a new Family Month. It focuses on the traditional nuclear family, which it defines as a married mother and father raising children together.
  • The proposal argues that the traditional family is the most important part of a healthy society. It claims that the decline of marriage has led to more crime and drug use in the country.
  • A major part of this plan is to stop recognizing Pride Month in June. The sponsors believe that Pride Month events often insult traditional families and that the government should focus on marriage instead.
  • The resolution also points out that the U.S. birth rate is falling and that some government tax rules actually make it harder for people to stay married. It suggests that a dedicated month would help the country focus on these issues.

Impact Analysis

Govbase has not yet run an impact analysis on this legislation.

Milestones

1 milestone2 actions
Jun 4, 2025House

Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.

Jun 4, 2025

Submitted in House

Votes

No votes have been recorded for this legislation yet.

News

No related news coverage found for this legislation yet.

Source Information

Document Type

Congressional Bill

Official Title

Supporting the designation of Family Month.

Bill NumberHRES 475
Congress119th Congress
ChamberHouse of Representatives
Latest ActionReferred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.

Sponsor

Cosponsors

(22)
R: 22

Analysis generated by AI. Always verify with official sources.