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SRES 767 119th Congress · Senate

Senate Resolution Celebrating the 2026 FIFA World Cup

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Official title: A resolution celebrating the historic significance of the 2026 Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup and welcoming the international community to North America for the first tournament hosted by 3 nations.

This Senate resolution celebrates the historic significance of the 2026 FIFA World Cup and welcomes the international community to North America for the first tournament hosted by three nations. It is a ceremonial measure, not a spending bill or regulatory change, and it does not create new benefits, taxes, or mandates. The resolution is aimed at recognizing the event’s cultural, diplomatic, and economic importance for the United States, Canada, and Mexico, as well as the host cities and communities involved.

  • Celebrates the 2026 FIFA World Cup as a historic international event.
  • Welcomes the international community to North America for the tournament.
  • Recognizes the first World Cup hosted by three nations.
  • Does not create a new federal program or funding stream.
Public Relevance 8 / 100
Niche Narrow / procedural Broad

For most people, this resolution has no direct personal cost or benefit because it does not change taxes, eligibility, or federal programs. If you live in or travel to a host city, the main effect is indirect: more attention to the tournament, potential tourism activity, and related local economic activity around the 2026 World Cup. It may also shape how Congress publicly frames the event and the cooperation among the host nations.

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FOR
  • Host-city businesses and tourism operators They see the resolution as a public endorsement of an event that can bring visitors, hotel bookings, restaurant traffic, and global attention to local economies. Congressional recognition can help reinforce the importance of planning and welcoming international guests.
  • Sports fans and civic leaders They view the World Cup as a rare unifying event that showcases American cities on a global stage. A Senate resolution formally acknowledges the cultural significance of the tournament and the cooperation required to host it.
  • Cross-border trade and travel stakeholders They may support the measure because it highlights North American collaboration among the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The event can strengthen people-to-people ties and support smoother coordination around travel and logistics.
AGAINST
  • Fiscal watchdogs and budget hawks They may object that Congress is spending time on ceremonial recognition rather than substantive policy. Even symbolic resolutions can be seen as distracting from issues with direct budget or governance consequences.
  • Local residents concerned about event disruptions Some people near host venues may worry that celebratory attention overlooks traffic, crowding, security costs, and temporary strain on public services. They may prefer Congress to focus on practical support rather than praise.
  • Critics of sports commercialization They may argue that a congressional celebration lends institutional prestige to a highly commercial global event. From their perspective, the resolution elevates branding and spectacle over broader public priorities.
  • “celebrating the historic significance of the 2026 FIFA World Cup”

    This frames the tournament as a major international milestone, signaling congressional recognition of its cultural and diplomatic importance. It does not itself alter how the event is run, but it can influence public and institutional attention.

  • “welcoming the international community to North America”

    The resolution presents the United States as part of a broader North American host region. In practical terms, that can reinforce a message of openness to visitors, teams, media, and business activity tied to the tournament.

  • “the first tournament hosted by 3 nations”

    This highlights the unprecedented shared-host model for the World Cup. That arrangement can increase coordination needs across borders, cities, and event organizers, even though the resolution itself does not set those rules.

June 11, 2026

Referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. (text: CR S2768)

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