- Local governmentsProvides formal recognition of Congressman Gerald E. Connolly’s service, which supporters may say honors local public s…
- Local governmentsCreates a modest, one-time local demand for signage production and installation and minor updates to maps and federal r…
- Local governmentsClarifies the building’s official name for mailing, maps, and ceremonial uses, which supporters may say aids historical…
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 10660 Page Avenue in Fairfax, Virginia, as the "Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building".
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
This bill designates the United States Postal Service facility at 10660 Page Avenue in Fairfax, Virginia, as the "Congressman Gerald E.
Connolly Post Office Building." It requires that any reference to that facility in federal law, maps, regulations, documents, papers, or other records be deemed to refer to the new name.
The text contains only the naming and the cross-reference clause; it does not authorize spending, change operational aspects of the facility, or create new programs.
On content alone, the bill is narrowly focused, noncontroversial, fiscally negligible, and administratively simple—features that historically make such naming bills very likely to be enacted. The main remaining hurdles are routine legislative scheduling and any isolated procedural objections.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a straightforward and well-formed commemorative designation: it identifies the facility precisely and supplies the basic legal language needed to effect the name change.
Whether naming a federal facility after a (likely Democratic) sitting or recent officeholder is an acceptable, nonpolitical honor (liberal/centrist mostly comfortable; conservative more wary).
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesRequires small expenditures for new signage and administrative updates to agency databases, maps, and documents, which…
- Federal agenciesContributes to the ongoing proliferation of honorary namings of federal properties, which critics may argue diminishes…
- Local governmentsIf the honoree or the naming process is controversial locally, the designation could generate community disagreement or…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Whether naming a federal facility after a (likely Democratic) sitting or recent officeholder is an acceptable, nonpolitical honor (liberal/centrist mostly comfortable; conservative more wary).
Mainstream progressives would likely view the bill as a routine and positive recognition of public service by a local representative.
They would see the naming as an appropriate honor for constituent service and local civic engagement, provided the honoree has a record they find acceptable.
Because the bill only renames a facility and makes no policy or funding changes, it is unlikely to provoke major policy objections from this perspective.
A pragmatic, moderate observer would treat this as a low-stakes, customary congressional action to honor a local member of Congress.
They would note the absence of budgetary or regulatory effects and see the measure as largely symbolic.
Their main concerns would be procedural: ensuring local stakeholders support the name and avoiding unnecessary partisan theater.
Mainstream conservatives would likely view the bill as a small, symbolic action and may not oppose it on principle, but some would be cautious about naming federal property after a partisan officeholder or a living politician.
Those concerned about limited government and avoiding politicization of federal assets might prefer more neutral naming conventions or community-driven nominations.
Many conservatives would nonetheless treat this as low priority and may vote in favor if it has local bipartisan support.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
On content alone, the bill is narrowly focused, noncontroversial, fiscally negligible, and administratively simple—features that historically make such naming bills very likely to be enacted. The main remaining hurdles are routine legislative scheduling and any isolated procedural objections.
- The bill text contains no cost estimate or statement on who bears minor implementation costs (e.g., signage), though such costs are typically minimal.
- Legislative timing and floor scheduling are unknown; even noncontroversial bills can be delayed or bundled into larger packages, affecting their path.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Whether naming a federal facility after a (likely Democratic) sitting or recent officeholder is an acceptable, nonpolitical honor (liberal/…
On content alone, the bill is narrowly focused, noncontroversial, fiscally negligible, and administratively simple—features that historical…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a straightforward and well-formed commemorative designation: it identifies the facility precisely and supplies the basic legal language needed to effect the name c…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.