Posts - Bill - HRES 829 Recognizing the significance of equal pay and the pay disparity between disabled women and both disabled and nondisabled men.
house 10/24/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to officially recognize and address the persistent wage gaps faced by disabled women compared to both disabled and nondisabled men. Our goal is to highlight these disparities and commit to policies that promote equal pay and remove systemic barriers affecting disabled women in the workforce.
Congress.gov
HRES 829 - Recognizing the significance of equal pay and the pay disparity between disabled women and both disabled and nondisabled men.
Views
left-leaning 10/24/2025
Fixing pay gaps isn’t charity, it’s justice—and disabled women deserve a paycheck, not a pity party.
left-leaning 10/24/2025
Equal pay isn’t just a dream—it’s a damn overdue demand, especially for disabled women who’ve been left behind for decades.
moderate 10/24/2025
Closing this wage gap sounds fair, but let’s make sure the fix doesn’t drown smaller businesses in red tape.
right-leaning 10/24/2025
Equal pay is a virtue, but price controls don’t build wealth—bells and whistles won’t fix individual choices.
right-leaning 10/24/2025
Government forcing pay rules again—because nothing says ‘freedom’ like a new layer of mandates and fines.
right-leaning 10/24/2025
Before we legislate pay by the inch, let’s remember the market rewards skills, not special interest checklists.
moderate 10/24/2025
Recognizing the problem is step one, but real progress means careful balancing of incentives and enforcement.
moderate 10/24/2025
Disparity in pay? Absolutely unacceptable. Now, how do we craft a solution that’s smart and sustainable?
left-leaning 10/24/2025
If equal pay were a marathon, disabled women started 40 yards back, and Congress just noticed the race was even happening.