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Bill

HRES 1292

To acknowledge the Black Women Best framework to empower and improve life for all through guaranteed income, expanding child and income tax credit, increasing access to equitable health care and government assistance, prohibiting policing in schools, and prioritizing restorative justice.

119th Congress Introduced by Yvette Clarke and 6 co-sponsors

The bill endorses the Black Women Best framework to guide policymaking toward equity in income, health care, housing, and justice for all, centering Black women's experiences.

Submitted in House
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HRES 1292

Quick Summary

H.Res. 1292 is a non-binding resolution recognizing the Black Women Best (BWB) framework as a guide for policymaking. It emphasizes centering Black women’s lived experiences to promote equitable economic, health, and educational outcomes, and it requests consideration of related proposals and precedents to advance a more just policy agenda.

Purpose and Intent

  • Acknowledge and promote the Black Women Best framework as a blueprint to empower Black women and improve life for all through:
    • guaranteed income
    • expanded child and earned income tax credits
    • greater access to equitable health care and government assistance
    • ending policing in schools
    • prioritizing restorative justice
  • Encourage lawmakers to adopt policy approaches that center the experiences of Black women in public policy decisions.
  • Promote use of the BWB framework and related measures as guidelines for creating and implementing better public policies benefiting all people, with a special focus on Black women.
  • Recommend consideration of legislative proposals from the Congressional Caucus on Black Women and Girls’ 2023 report, “An Economy for All: Building a ‘Black Women Best’ Legislative Agenda.”

Key Provisions and Changes Proposed

  • Recognition: The resolution formally acknowledges the BWB framework and its aims.
  • Policy Orientation: Calls for policy design and evaluation that center Black women’s experiences to foster a more equal and just future.
  • Encouragement of Framework-Driven Legislation: Urges use of BWB and complementary frameworks as guidance for creating and implementing public policies.
  • Alignment with Specific Proposals: Encourages consideration of the 2023 report’s proposals to repair historical disparities and build an economy that works for everyone.
  • Non-Binding Nature: As a resolution, its effects are informational and aspirational rather than creating new legal entitlements or funding.

Who/What Would Be Affected

  • Members of Congress, the executive branch, and federal policymakers are urged to apply the BWB framework in decision-making.
  • Policymaking processes related to:
    • guaranteed income and expanded tax credits (child tax credit, earned income tax credit)
    • equitable health care access and government assistance programs
    • school policies and disciplinary practices (policing in schools)
    • restorative justice initiatives
  • The resolution also highlights issues affecting Black women, including labor market disparities, health care access and quality, housing, food security, disability rights, and access to government benefits.

Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Introduced in the 119th Congress on May 14, 2026.
  • Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform for consideration.
  • As a concurrent resolution (non-binding), it does not itself alter law or authorize spending; rather, it signals support and provides a framework for future legislative proposals.

Potential Impact

  • Sets a governance and policy-making tone favoring equity-centered frameworks.
  • Could influence the development and evaluation of future legislation related to income supports, tax credits, health care access, housing, and criminal justice reform.
  • May galvanize advocacy and legislative activity around the BWB framework and the 2023 report’s recommendations.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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