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SRES 21119th CongressIn Committee

A resolution designating October 10, 2025, as "American Girls in Sports Day".

Introduced: Jan 13, 2025
Standard Summary
Comprehensive overview in 1-2 paragraphs

This is a Senate resolution designating October 10, 2025, as "American Girls in Sports Day." As a non-binding, symbolic measure, it honors the role of women and girls in U.S. sports, reiterates support for Title IX, and emphasizes the importance of protecting opportunities for biological women in athletic competition. The resolution also presents arguments about biological differences between men and women and asserts that there has been an increase in the participation of biological men in women’s sports, urging sports-governing bodies to safeguard biological women and girls in sports. Because it is a resolution, not a statute, it does not create or adjust law or funding. Instead, it expresses the Senate’s viewpoints and asks relevant sports organizations to consider protecting the integrity of women’s and girls’ sports.

Key Points

  • 1Designates October 10, 2025, as “American Girls in Sports Day.”
  • 2Highlights the positive impact of athletic participation on girls and acknowledges the historical contributions of women in American sports.
  • 3Reaffirms the importance of Title IX in protecting girls and women in sports.
  • 4States that there are biological differences between men and women that affect competition and safety, and claims an increasing number of biological men participate in women’s sports.
  • 5References NAIA policy changes as an example of actions to protect female athletes, and urges U.S. and international sports governing bodies to protect biological women and girls in sports.
  • 6Note: The resolution is introductory, referred to a committee, and does not by itself create enforceable rights or obligations.

Impact Areas

Primary group/area affected: biological women and girls involved in sports, including athletes and student-athletes.Secondary group/area affected: sports-governing bodies (e.g., national and international associations) that oversee eligibility rules for women’s sports.Additional impacts: increases public awareness around debates over gender and sports; could influence policy discussions and advocacy, though it does not change law or provide funding.
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