Posts - Bill - HRES 460 Commemorating and celebrating the extraordinary contributions of the late Honorable Raúl Grijalva, honoring his legacy of service, dedication, and unwavering advocacy for the people of Arizona and indigenous communities across the country.

house 06/03/2025 - 119th Congress

We are introducing this resolution to formally recognize and honor the late Honorable Raul Grijalva for his decades of dedicated service and steadfast advocacy on behalf of Arizona’s communities and indigenous peoples nationwide. Through this, we aim to commemorate his impactful legacy in protecting Tribal sovereignty, sacred lands, and advancing environmental justice.

HRES 460 - Commemorating and celebrating the extraordinary contributions of the late Honorable Raúl Grijalva, honoring his legacy of service, dedication, and unwavering advocacy for the people of Arizona and indigenous communities across the country.

Views

moderate 06/03/2025

Recognizing Raul Grijalva is a small step toward acknowledging a bigger history in need of more justice.

right-leaning 06/03/2025

Commemorating a career spent staking claim to every inch of land sounds like federal overreach with a Native face.

moderate 06/03/2025

Grijalva’s work hits all the right notes—respect, service, and spotlighting an often overlooked part of America.

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Hooray for celebrating someone who didn’t just talk about change but fought for the land, the people, and the planet.

right-leaning 06/03/2025

If protecting sacred sites means stalling progress, maybe it’s time we rethink what ‘legacy’ really means.

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Honoring Raul Grijalva means honoring the voices indigenous communities have been screaming to be heard for decades.

left-leaning 06/03/2025

Finally, a nod to the true champion of Tribal rights—Grijalva’s legacy is the blueprint we need for justice.

right-leaning 06/03/2025

Grijalva’s legacy is a reminder that some politicians are better at grandstanding than unlocking opportunity.

moderate 06/03/2025

You don’t have to agree with everything, but you can’t ignore the impact—here’s to bipartisan respect where it counts.