International Human Rights Defense Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The International Human Rights Defense Act of 2025 starts with findings that LGBTQI+ people face criminalization, violence, discrimination, stigma, forced anal examinations, restrictions on NGOs, unsafe asylum conditions, health-care exclusion, HIV risk, anti-LGBTQI+ legislation, and violence against transgender and intersex people. It then declares U.S. policy to integrate prevention and response to criminalization, discrimination, and violence against LGBTQI+ people into foreign policy, support local capacity, consult NGOs including faith-based and LGBTQI-led organizations, use multisector approaches, train foreign military, police, and judicial officials, require U.S.-funded contractors and grantees to maintain nondiscrimination policies covering sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics, support HIV/AIDS enabling environments, develop regional decriminalization strategies, and protect LGBTQI+ asylum seekers and refugees. The bill establishes a permanent Special Envoy for the Human Rights of LGBTQI+ People at the Department of State, appointed by the President and potentially at ambassador rank with Senate confirmation. The Special Envoy directs relevant State Department activities, policies, programs, and funding; leads interagency coordination; represents the United States in bilateral and multilateral forums; consults NGOs; briefs Congress within 180 days and annually; and develops or updates a global strategy within 180 days and every two years. The bill amends Foreign Assistance Act human-rights reports to include criminalization, discrimination, and violence by state and non-state actors based on sexual orientation, gender identity, or sex characteristics and to identify countries with discriminatory laws. It authorizes State Department assistance for programs responding to abuses, supporting legal and judicial capacity, strengthening health-sector response including HIV/AIDS coordination, and developing leadership programs for international LGBTQI+ activists.
Who Benefits and How
LGBTQI+ people internationally benefit because U.S. foreign policy, reporting, assistance, and diplomacy must address criminalization, discrimination, violence, and social exclusion. International LGBTQI+ rights organizations and activists benefit from consultation requirements, leadership programs, capacity-building assistance, and a dedicated Special Envoy. LGBTQI+ asylum seekers and refugees benefit because the policy statement directs attention to persecution-based protection and safe access. International HIV/AIDS programs benefit because the bill connects decriminalization, stigma reduction, and health-sector capacity with epidemic-control goals. Congress benefits from annual briefings, biennial global strategies, and expanded human-rights reporting on anti-LGBTQI+ laws and abuses.
Who Bears the Burden and How
The State Department must establish and staff the Special Envoy role, coordinate bureaus and offices, direct relevant funding, and produce strategies and briefings. Federal agencies with international programs must coordinate with the Special Envoy on LGBTQI+ human rights and social inclusion priorities. U.S. government contractors, grant recipients, and cooperative-agreement recipients must maintain nondiscrimination policies inclusive of sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics and protect staff and beneficiaries. Foreign governments with anti-LGBTQI+ laws face more explicit U.S. reporting, diplomatic pressure, and identification in human-rights reports. State Department reporting bureaus must collect and describe country-level criminalization, discrimination, and violence by state and non-state actors.
Key Provisions
- Declares U.S. policy to integrate LGBTQI+ human rights into foreign policy, assistance, training, HIV/AIDS work, and asylum-related protection.
- Establishes a permanent State Department Special Envoy for the Human Rights of LGBTQI+ People.
- Requires congressional briefings within 180 days and annually thereafter on LGBTQI+ human rights and U.S. response strategies.
- Requires a global strategy within 180 days and updates every two years.
- Requires Foreign Assistance Act human-rights reports to cover criminalization, discrimination, and violence based on sexual orientation, gender identity, or sex characteristics.
- Authorizes assistance for protection, legal and judicial capacity, health-sector response, HIV/AIDS coordination, and leadership programs for international LGBTQI+ activists.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Makes protection of LGBTQI+ people abroad a permanent U.S. foreign-policy priority by establishing a State Department Special Envoy, requiring global strategies and congressional briefings, adding sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics reporting to Foreign Assistance Act human-rights reports, authorizing assistance for programs responding to violence and discrimination, and defining covered terms.
Key Policy Areas
Human Rights, Foreign Policy, LGBTQI Rights
Primary Purpose
Makes protection of LGBTQI+ people abroad a permanent U.S. foreign-policy priority by establishing a State Department Special Envoy, requiring global strategies and congressional briefings, adding sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics reporting to Foreign Assistance Act human-rights reports, authorizing assistance for programs responding to violence and discrimination, and defining covered terms.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- LGBTQI+ people internationally
- International LGBTQI+ rights organizations
- International LGBTQI+ activists
- LGBTQI+ asylum seekers
- LGBTQI+ refugees
- International HIV/AIDS programs
- Congressional foreign affairs committees
Identified Costs
- Department of State
- Special Envoy staff
- Federal agencies with international programs
- U.S. government foreign-assistance contractors
- U.S. government grantees
- Foreign governments with anti-LGBTQI+ laws
- State Department reporting bureaus
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMr. Garcia of California (for himself, Ms. Jacobs, Ms. DelBene, …
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Congressional foreign affairs committees, Department of State, Department of State assistance programs
Positive-direction: Congressional foreign affairs committees
Negative-direction: Department of State, Department of State assistance programs, Federal agencies with international programs, Special Envoy staff, State Department reporting bureaus
International LGBTQI+ activists, International LGBTQI+ rights advocates, International LGBTQI+ rights organizations
International HIV/AIDS programs, International health organizations working on HIV/AIDS
Foreign governments with anti-LGBTQI+ laws, Foreign military, police, and judicial training programs
U.S. foreign assistance contractors and grantees
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology