David McKinley
Key Voting Record
Key Vote Description
Legislator Score / Vote
2020: 116th Congress 60%
- 1: On Passage: Borrower Defense Institutional Accountability Rule CRA, H.J.Res. 76✔ Nay
Key Vote 1: On Passage: Borrower Defense Institutional Accountability Rule CRA, H.J.Res. 76
This Democrat-only Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution would undo updated borrower defense regulations that will be a marked improvement over the existing set of regulations that were issued under President Obama. Borrower defense policy, which is intended to allow students who were defrauded by institutions of higher education to receive relief for their federal student loans, has existed for more than two decades but was rarely used until the Obama Administration. Whatever one’s opinion on the merits of loan forgiveness for alleged defrauding or even of federal student loans themselves, it can and should certainly be agreed upon that such a forgiveness program should be structured in such a way that it provides relief only to those who were truly defrauded, in the same way that the social safety net should apply only to the most vulnerable and in need amongst us. The revised borrower defense regulations set to go into effect in July 2020 are the result of more than two years of deliberations and significant input from the public and from higher education stakeholders, following years of broad relief granted to groups under the existing regulations. As such, fortunately, the new regulations address many of the flaws of the existing structure of borrower defense. Chief among these is the narrowing of the definition of misrepresentation by requiring that the institution must have knowledge that the alleged misrepresentation is false.
"Nay" votes scored. - 2: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: USPS Fairness Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 2: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: USPS Fairness Act
The USPS Fairness Act sets the stage for a taxpayer-funded bailout of the Retiree Health Benefits Fund. There are serious and fiscal proposals to address the issues that face the U.S. Postal Service. The USPS Fairness Act is not one of them.
"Nay" votes scored. - 3: On Passage: PRO Act✔ Nay
Key Vote 3: On Passage: PRO Act
The PRO Act is one of the most anti-worker and anti-business bills that we have ever seen brought to the House floor. Introduced by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), the PRO Act is a giveaway to labor unions that would harm our economy and that especially targets workers who choose not to join unions.
"Nay" votes scored. - 4: On Passage: Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief and Puerto Rico Disaster Tax Relief Act✔ Nay
Key Vote 4: On Passage: Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief and Puerto Rico Disaster Tax Relief Act
The additional appropriations in the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief and Puerto Rico Disaster Tax Relief Act would spend an additional $4.67 billion in FY 2020. While we understand that this is for emergency disaster relief, question both whether it is necessary to appropriate new funds whether they will even be put to good use, considering that a) there is $34.846 billion left in the Disaster Relief Fund and b) that it recently came to light that unused resources provided after Hurricane Maria in September 2017 were discovered in a warehouse in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
"Nay" votes scored. - 5: On Passage: Quit or Die Act, H.R. 2339✔ Nay
Key Vote 5: On Passage: Quit or Die Act, H.R. 2339
This bill is nothing short of an assault on the vaping industry, which provides smokers with a method of harm reduction that is 95 percent safer than traditional, combustible cigarettes. The message House Democrats are sending with H.R. 2339 is that Americans who want to kick the habit through vaping should either “quit or die.” H.R. 2339 would outright ban online sales of flavored vaping products, and ban the flavors themselves. The bill would also require graphic health warnings on tobacco packaging. This is nanny state governance at its worst.
"Nay" votes scored. - 6: On Passage: USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, H.R. 6172✘ Yea
Key Vote 6: On Passage: USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, H.R. 6172
Sponsored by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-New York), this bill would reauthorize expiring provisions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), including Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act and the “lone wolf” and “roving wiretap” authorities. This bill contains a lot of window dressing to conceal that it largely leaves untouched the legal authorities that have been abused to circumvent the Constitution and acquire the data of millions of innocent Americans without a warrant.
"Nay" votes scored. Triple Score - 7: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: Families First Coronavirus Response Act, H.R. 6201✘ Yea
Key Vote 7: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: Families First Coronavirus Response Act, H.R. 6201
This bill is being brought to the floor, pushed by House Democrats, without any committee discussion or debate in the primary committee of jurisdiction and being brought to the floor without the opportunity for amendments. The process for this bill is only one of the concerns we have over H.R. 6201. Furthermore, it is deceitful of House Democrats to attempt to fast-track a bill to deal with a serious problem like the nationwide concern over coronavirus, which is not much more than a wishlist of government programs and policies that they would, make no mistake, like to see made permanent. These programs and policies include an increase in the Federal Matching Assistance Program (FMAP) formula for Medicaid, expansions of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and paid family leave.
"Nay" votes scored. - 8: On Passage: HEROES Act✔ Nay
Key Vote 8: On Passage: HEROES Act
The HEROES Act is a $3 trillion, 1,800-page partisan messaging bill that has no chance of becoming law. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) knows that this bill won’t become law. Yet, she is forcing the House to vote as a political stunt, after refusing to bring the House back into session last week due to concerns of containing the spread of COVID-19. This is blatant hypocrisy at its worst. Nearly all of the HEROES Act is a wishlist of far-left demands, several of which are unrelated to COVID-19. The HEROES Act would bail out state and local governments to the tune of nearly $1 trillion. Many states seeking this bailout have been fiscally mismanaged for years. The HEROES Act would extend enhanced unemployment benefits past the current deadline of July 31, 2020 to January 31, 2021 and create a supplemental period of March 31, 2021 for those whose benefits have not been exhausted. This would only further prolong the economic recovery, putting employers, who will undoubtedly need workers to fill jobs, in direct competition with the federal government paying individuals not to work. Among its many, many other provisions, the HEROES Act includes expansions of welfare programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Medicaid. The bill would also provide another round of tax rebate payments, send money to states for highways and mass transit, impose mandates on states for federal elections, bail out failing union pension plans, prohibit cost-sharing for any COVID-19-related treatment, and create a contract tracing initiative.
"Nay" votes scored. Double Score - 9: On Motion to Disagree to the Senate Amendments and Request a Conference on the USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, H.R. 6172✘ Yea
Key Vote 9: On Motion to Disagree to the Senate Amendments and Request a Conference on the USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, H.R. 6172
This is a procedural vote in the House to go to conference with the Senate on the USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, H.R. 6172. House Democratic leadership botched the handling of this bill from the beginning, denying an open process to members. Leading up to this particular vote, Democratic leadership and House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) continued to play games, negotiating in bad faith with surveillance reformers. A conference committee would lead to reopening H.R. 6172 and watering down reforms, such as the Lee-Leahy amendment, that had passed the Senate. This is why FreedomWorks has taken a rare step of opposing a procedural motion in the House.
"Nay" votes scored. - 10: On Passage: Washington, D.C. Admission Act, H.R. 51✔ Nay
Key Vote 10: On Passage: Washington, D.C. Admission Act, H.R. 51
The Washington, D.C. Admission Act would admit Washington, D.C. into the Union, making it the 51st state. It’s very likely that this bill is unconstitutional. Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 of the Constitution states: “The Congress shall have Power…[t]o exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings.” The Washington, D.C. Admission Act would reduce the size of the federal district to a small strip of land that includes the U.S. Capitol Building, the White House, and the National Mall. The bill would also give Washington, D.C. one representative in the U.S. House of Representatives and two senators in the U.S. Senate, increasing the number of voting members of Congress to 538 (436 in the House and 102 in the Senate). Simply put, the Constitution must be amended to make Washington, D.C. a state. As Roger Pilon of the Cato Institute once noted, this has been the conclusion of every presidential administration since John F. Kennedy, with the exception of the Obama administration. Even in the Obama administration, the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) came to the same conclusion that previous administrations had reached. Then-Attorney General Eric Holder didn’t like the conclusion reached by OLC, so he sought and received a conclusion that he liked from the Office of the Solicitor General. Of course, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act is a political ploy. The admission of Washington, D.C. into the Union would bring one representative in House of Representatives and two senators in the Senate. The District of Columbia, which was given three electoral votes through the Twenty-Third Amendment, is overwhelmingly Democratic and would ensure more political power for Democrats in Congress, particularly in the Senate.
"Nay" votes scored. - 11: On Passage: Patient Protection and Affordable Care Enhancement Act, H.R. 1425✔ Nay
Key Vote 11: On Passage: Patient Protection and Affordable Care Enhancement Act, H.R. 1425
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Enhancement Act, H.R. 1425, doubles down on ObamaCare by attempting to force more people into both the exchanges and Medicaid while also adding on socialist-style price controls on prescription drugs. Although Democrats have made clear that Medicare for All remains their policy end-goal, this latest proposal seems to show that they are content in the meantime to continue herding patients into the existing silos that ObamaCare narrowed health care payments into.
"Nay" votes scored. - 12: On Passage: Moving Forward Act, H.R. 2✔ Nay
Key Vote 12: On Passage: Moving Forward Act, H.R. 2
he Moving Forward Act -- dubbed by Republicans as Pelosi’s “My Way or the Highway” Act -- is an infrastructure bill in name only. At over 2,309 pages, with 90,803 sections, H.R. 2 carries a $1.5 trillion price tag, up a full trillion dollars from the last version of the bill, the INVEST in America Act. Topline funding for surface and rail transportation is set at 62 percent above the current FAST Act levels for the next five years. The proposal also includes an excessive $22 billion “special funding pot” for FY 2021 that would be available only for costs associated with COVID-19 recovery. Funding levels for general infrastructure provide $500 billion for roads, bridges, and other transit, $130 billion for schools, $100 billion for housing, $100 billion for rural broadband, $70 billion for renewable energy, $65.6 billion for fresh-water resources, and $22.9 billion for aviation. In exchange for this abundance of appropriation, Speaker Pelosi has included language in nearly every section that creates new “green” mandates in an effort to help Democrats achieve the goals of the Green New Deal. For example -- in addition to the existing emissions standards of the Environmental Protection Agency -- H.R. 2 would require the Department of Transportation to spend $200 billion over the next five years to establish emissions performance measures and restrictions on public roads. Unfortunately, this is only one example amongst thousands of the new top-down, “green” mandates included in H.R. 2. Instead of taking this opportunity to seek bipartisan consensus to smartly invest in rebuilding our roads and ports, Speaker Pelosi is holding infrastructure funding hostage in exchange for a progressive agenda.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2019: 116th Congress 50%
- 1: On Passage: Federal Civilian Workforce Pay Raise Fairness Act, H.R. 790✘ Yea
Key Vote 1: On Passage: Federal Civilian Workforce Pay Raise Fairness Act, H.R. 790
The Federal Civilian Workforce Pay Raise Fairness Act gives civilian workers a 2.6 percent pay increase, retroactive to the beginning of 2019, without any offsets. Congress cannot continue to spend money it doesn't have when facing a projected budget deficit of nearly $900 in FY 2019 and a $22 trillion national debt.
"Nay" votes scored. - 2: On Agreeing to the Conference Report: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.J.Res. 31✘ Yea
Key Vote 2: On Agreeing to the Conference Report: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.J.Res. 31
In the new House Democrat rules package, Democrats tried to sell the idea that leadership under them would be different than leadership under former Speaker Paul Ryan. One change made to sell this lie was expanding the “three-day rule” meant to require ample time for members to consider legislation before voting on it to a full 72 hours. Unsurprisingly, this rule hasn’t been adhered to very frequently thus far into the 116th Congress, and this spending package is no exception. Just as House Republican leadership in March 2018 dropped the text of a 2,232-page omnibus spending bill less than 24 hours before forcing members to vote on it — ignoring the three-day rule in the process — House Democratic leadership is today doing the same. Likely fewer than 12 hours will have passed between members laying eyes on this bill and members casting their votes on it. This means that nobody will have read it and nobody will be fully aware of what is in it, but, of course, members will be told they need to support it or be blamed for another shutdown. This is simply no way to govern.
"Nay" votes scored. - 3: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Davidson Amendment (#32) to H.R. 1✔ Yea
Key Vote 3: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Davidson Amendment (#32) to H.R. 1
This amendment, sponsored by Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), strikes subtitle F of H.R. 1, which would force the disclosure of contributions made by corporations. This is a clear attempt by House Democrats to pave the way for political pressure on businesses that donate to organizations that promote certain causes, including ideological organizations, with which Democrats disagree.
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Davidson Amendment (#33) to H.R. 1✔ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Davidson Amendment (#33) to H.R. 1
This amendment, sponsored by Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), strikes subtitle E of H.R. 1, which would repeal the prohibition on new regulations from the Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service of 501(c)(4) organizations.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: On Passage: For the Politicians Act, H.R. 1✔ Nay
Key Vote 5: On Passage: For the Politicians Act, H.R. 1
H.R. 1 includes several problematic provisions, many of which run roughshod over the freedom of speech and freedom of association protected by the First Amendment and privacy. The bill will do this by threatening to expose the identities of private citizens who participate in the political process, thus opening them, and their businesses, to threats and intimidation. H.R. 1 would require that “all organizations involved in political activity” must disclose their donors. This provision hides under the guise of transparency but will discourage many American citizens from participating in the political process, and from dedicating their resources to it. This is hardly giving political power to the people. It is the opposite and will have a chilling effect on free speech. The Supreme Court, in Citizens United v. FEC (2010), upheld that political donations are protected free speech under the First Amendment. Subtitle A of Title V of H.R. 1 actually goes as far as to declare that it is the sense of Congress that this decision is “detrimental to democracy” and that the Constitution should be amended to flout it. At least the supporters of this bill recognize that they need a constitutional amendment to regulate campaign finance. Yet, they unabashedly attempt to do so throughout this unconstitutional legislation.
"Nay" votes scored. Triple Score - 6: On Passage: Paycheck Fairness Act, H.R. 7✔ Nay
Key Vote 6: On Passage: Paycheck Fairness Act, H.R. 7
The bill would make it easier for an employee or employees who allege wage discrimination to sue their employer while also making it nearly impossible for employers to defend their practices. Most importantly, not only does it do this at no benefit to the women it purports to be for, but actually does it at their expense, by harming job creators who offer the variety of jobs that women enjoy choice within.
"Nay" votes scored. - 7: On Passage: "Save the Internet Act," H.R. 1644✔ Nay
Key Vote 7: On Passage: "Save the Internet Act," H.R. 1644
The “Save the Internet” Act would bring us back to the Obama-era paradigm of big government interference in the economy, less innovation, and lower levels of investment. With America on the cusp of unlocking and deploying fifth generation (5G) technology, it is vitally important that we not shift back to this burdensome reality. Light touch regulations give providers the space to innovate in the ways they build out broadband infrastructure in underserved communities. Too many Americans have limited Internet access. We can bridge this “digital divide” by lowering government barriers. Erecting new ones, as this bill suggests, will only slow that progress. This legislation also presents property rights issues. The “tubes” used to deliver Internet by Internet service providers (ISP) are their property. Mandating how that property may be used and what prices they can charge is a violation of their property rights. Any lasting framework set forth for Internet governance must embrace this principle. The Save the Internet Act, on the other hand, outright rejects it. The “Save the Internet” Act would also serve as a tax hike on everyday Americans. Because of legislation like the Internet Tax Freedom Act of 1998 and the Tax Freedom Forever Act of 2016, Americans do not pay taxes on data use and information services. Reclassifying the Internet as a Title II public utility and telecommunications service would allow every America to be taxed extra for their data use. This could increase their Internet bill by up to 20 percent a month. This is unacceptable.
"Nay" votes scored. - 8: On Passage: Climate Action Now Act, H.R. 9✔ Nay
Key Vote 8: On Passage: Climate Action Now Act, H.R. 9
The bill would require the Trump administration to develop a plan for the United States to meet the carbon emissions reductions agreed to by the Obama administration under the non-binding Paris Agreement. Meeting these reductions would lead to increased electricity costs, reduced gross domestic product (GDP), and fewer jobs.
"Nay" votes scored. - 9: On Passage: Protecting Americans with Preexisting Conditions Act, H.R. 986✔ Nay
Key Vote 9: On Passage: Protecting Americans with Preexisting Conditions Act, H.R. 986
The Protecting Americans With Preexisting Conditions Act, contrary to its short title, would do nothing to protect Americans with preexisting conditions and would instead only make it more difficult for Americans both with and without preexisting conditions to have the choices they need to get the best health insurance and subsequently to get the best quality of healthcare for themselves. In October of last year, the Trump Administration issued guidance to allow states increased flexibility for some provisions of Obamacare through the use of its Section 1332 waivers. This guidance, called the “State Relief and Empowerment Waivers,” did not allow for waiverability of the Title I regulation in Obamacare that deals with mandated coverage for individuals with pre-existing conditions, as the law does not allow for this. The guidance did, however, open up the ability of states to increase competition and choice within their insurance markets. It expanded the definition of health insurance coverage and allowed states to direct Obamacare’s tax credit subsidies towards health insurance plans that do not cover the full scope of Obamacare’s requirements, including short-term, limited duration insurance plans and association health plans. This move, quite simply, allows those who benefit more from a less comprehensive plan to choose such a plan, without affecting individuals with pre-existing conditions and the coverage they need at all, should they not benefit from such plans.
"Nay" votes scored. - 10: On Passage: Supplemental Appropriations Act, H.R. 2157✘ Yea
Key Vote 10: On Passage: Supplemental Appropriations Act, H.R. 2157
The Supplemental Appropriations Act is a modified and worsened version of another supplemental appropriations bill, H.R. 268, that passed the House in January. H.R. 2157 spends close to 50 percent more than H.R. 268 despite, again, no new funds being requested for these disasters. Because it will be brought to the floor as an emergency supplemental, the spending in it is also exempt from the Budget Control Act discretionary spending caps. H.R. 2157 would also ramp up agriculture subsidies that already distort the market and amount to no better than other defunct welfare programs. With $22 trillion of national debt and more being added with each passing day, we need to be spending more, not less. At the very least, we need to fully and honestly offset any new federal spending with further spending cuts. Additionally, the rule governing H.R. 2157 would extend the National Flood Insurance Program through the end of the year without any reforms, which conservatives have been rightfully fighting for the past seemingly infinite number of reauthorizations.
"Nay" votes scored. - 11: Rep. Chip Roy's Letter to Speaker Pelosi Against Busting the Spending Caps✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: Rep. Chip Roy's Letter to Speaker Pelosi Against Busting the Spending Caps
Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) has circulated a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for signers. The letter expresses strong opposition to another deal to bust the discretionary spending caps. As part of our effort to defeat a discretionary spending caps deal, FreedomWorks is key voting the signatories to the letter.
"Yea" votes scored. Triple Score - 12: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Concur in the Senate Amendment: Supplemental Appropriations Act - H.R. 2157✘ Yea
Key Vote 12: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Concur in the Senate Amendment: Supplemental Appropriations Act - H.R. 2157
The Senate amendment to H.R. 2157 would provide for $19.1 billion in disaster relief funds for wildfires, hurricanes, and flooding, as well as for Puerto Rico. This bill, which has been heavily negotiated for months, is nothing that any Republican should support. It appropriates too much money -- more money than previously-passed versions of the legislation -- when there is already more than $29 billion of disaster relief money still unspent. Furthermore, it will be voted on with only hours’ notice without any members having truly read through the lengthy legislation to understand what is in it. This is unacceptable. Instead of continuing this abhorrent process for passing bills, Congress needs to change the way it approaches disaster relief spending. When we as a nation are $22 trillion in debt as we are now, the last thing we need to be doing is appropriating money that we don’t have, to causes that we don’t fully understand, in an unlimited manner.
"Nay" votes scored. - 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Foster Amendment to H.R. 2740✘ Yea
Key Vote 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Foster Amendment to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.), this amendment would strike Section 510 of the Labor-HHS Appropriations bill which currently prohibits HHS from spending any federal dollars to promulgate or adopt a national patient identifier.
"Nay" votes scored. - 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Castor Amendment to H.R. 2740✔ Nay
Key Vote 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Castor Amendment to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Kathy Castor (D-Fla.), this amendment would prohibit the funds made available by this Act from being used to implement, administer or enforce the Trump administration's short-term, limited duration insurance rule. While short-term, limited duration health plans are no fix to Obamacare, they are a step in the right direction in expanding consumer choice and access to plans that are not governed by Obamacare’s harmful Title I regulations.
"Nay" votes scored. - 15: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division A to H.R. 2740✘ Nay
Key Vote 15: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division A to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), this amendment reduces spending for each amount in Division A by 14 percent. This reduction would be consistent with spending levels under the Budget Control Act of 2011.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Walker Amendment (#89) to H.R. 2740✘ Nay
Key Vote 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Walker Amendment (#89) to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.), this amendment eliminates $23.9 billion in funding for the bilateral economic assistance and independent agency programs within the Department of State. This amendment would, over a ten year period, fully offset the enormous disaster relief package that was fully un-offset when it passed the House last week. It cuts enough to both pay for the cost of the bill ($19.1 billion) as well as the assumed interest on the debt ($5.87 billion) that the bill created.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Palmer Amendment to H.R. 2740✔ Yea
Key Vote 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Palmer Amendment to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala.), this amendment strikes the paragraph that prevents the U.S. from withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement and strikes the paragraph that allows for payments for the agreement. Virtually none of the signers of the Paris Agreement have met their emissions reduction targets, while in the same period the United States has led the world in greenhouse gas emissions reduction. We should continue to let the market, not intergovernmental agreements, lead the way in reducing emissions.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division D of H.R. 2740✘ Nay
Key Vote 18: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division D of H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), this amendment would reduce spending for each amount in Division D, except those amounts made available to the Department of Defense, by 14 percent. We should note that while this amendment is on the right track, it would be even better if it did not exclude those amounts made available to the Department of Defense from its cuts. No department should be exempt from close scrutiny, and the Department of Defense, like most other agencies, has proven to be one rampant with waste and excessive, unnecessary spending. With the national debt looming as our greatest national security threat, it is in the best interest of the military itself to pare back on Pentagon spending.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Amash Amendment to H.R. 2740✘ Nay
Key Vote 19: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Amash Amendment to H.R. 2740
"Sponsored by Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), this amendment would limit the warrantless collection of Americans’ communications under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Passed in January 2018, the FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act was the exact opposite of reform. It continued the backdoor search loophole, through which the communications of Americans may be collected and unconstitutionally searched by the FBI, with an utterly meaningless “warrant requirement.” The caveats created by this purported “warrant requirement” are an end-run around the Fourth Amendment. The FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act provided a path for the National Security Agency (NSA) to restart the practice of “abouts” collection. This means if a U.S. person mentions a potential surveillance target in a communication, the NSA can collect it, regardless of whether or not the U.S. person was communicating with anyone associated with the target. When the NSA was forced to end “abouts” collection, a federal judge on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) wrote that the practice raised “a very serious Fourth Amendment issue.” The judge also criticized the NSA for “an institutional lack of candor” for failing to disclose rule violations."
"Yea" votes scored. Double Score - 20: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division E to H.R. 2740✘ Nay
Key Vote 20: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division E to H.R. 2740
Sponsored by Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), this amendment reduces spending for each amount in Division E by 14 percent. This reduction would be consistent with spending levels under the Budget Control Act of 2011. FreedomWorks will continue to review amendments to H.R. 2740 and, hopefully, send only one more key vote notice if additional amendments are made in order.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division A of H.R. 3055✘ Nay
Key Vote 21: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division A of H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), this amendment reduces spending for each amount in Division A by 14 percent. This reduction would be consistent with spending levels under the Budget Control Act of 2011.
"Yea" votes scored. - 22: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Underwood Amendment to H.R. 3055✔ Nay
Key Vote 22: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Underwood Amendment to H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-Ill.), this amendment would prevent the Department of Justice from using funds to litigate any case in which the constitutionality or enforceability of any provision of Obamacare is in question. Obviously, this amendment is aimed at the Department of Justice’s participation in Texas v. United States. This case is pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Oral arguments will be heard in July.
"Nay" votes scored. - 23: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division B to H.R. 3055✘ Nay
Key Vote 23: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks Amendment to Division B to H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), this amendment reduces spending for each amount in Division B by 14 percent. This reduction would be consistent with spending levels under the Budget Control Act of 2011.
"Yea" votes scored. - 24: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Duncan Amendment to H.R. 3055✔ Yea
Key Vote 24: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Duncan Amendment to H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.), this amendment would prohibit the use of funds for the Obama-era EPA’s Clean Power Plan. According to the Heritage Foundation, the Clean Power Plan would have created an annual shortfall of 300,000 jobs, a loss of $2.5 trillion in GDP, and $7,000 in lost income per person.
"Yea" votes scored. - 25: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Hice Amendment to H.R. 3055✘ Nay
Key Vote 25: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Hice Amendment to H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Jody Hice (R-Ga.), this amendment would reduce the amounts appropriated in Division C by 23.6 percent, unless a specific amount is required by law. This reduction would match the President’s budget request for FY 2020.
"Yea" votes scored. - 26: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Bost Amendment to H.R. 3055✘ Yea
Key Vote 26: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Bost Amendment to H.R. 3055
Sponsored by Rep. Mike Bost (R-Ill.), this amendment would prohibit the use of funds from contravening an executive order to “buy American.” This amendment comes at a time when protectionism has at least somewhat diminished the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Indeed, a recent study by the National Taxpayers Union Foundation found that the tariffs imposed since 2017 represent the third largest tax hike since World War II. The study also found that if all threatened tariffs are imposed “the combined result will be far and away the largest tax increase in the post-war era in real dollar terms.” This amendment may not be about tariffs, but it’s the same protectionist sentiment.
"Nay" votes scored. - 27: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Khanna Amendment to H.R. 2500✘ Nay
Key Vote 27: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Khanna Amendment to H.R. 2500
Sponsored by Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), this amendment would prohibit unauthorized military force in or against Iran.
"Yea" votes scored. - 28: On Passage: Raise the Wage Act, H.R. 582✔ Nay
Key Vote 28: On Passage: Raise the Wage Act, H.R. 582
Introduced by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), the Raise the Wage Act, H.R. 582, would increase the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour over five years. A more appropriate short title for H.R. 582 would be the “Guaranteed Unemployment for Low-Skill and Entry-Level Workers Act.” According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2.1 percent of hourly workers earn the federal minimum wage, with 47.1 percent of those being between the ages of 16 and 24. Generally, these are young and low-skill individuals who need to develop job skills while in high school or college before a career. The Raise the Wage Act would put in place a significant barrier for these young and low-skill individuals who are seeking to enter the workforce. The Raise the Wage Act would gradually increase the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour over five years and, after the five-year phase-in, require the Secretary of Labor to annually determine a percentage increase based on the percent increase of the median hourly wages of all employees. The bill would also phase-out the federal $2.13 minimum wage for tipped workers. This particular aspect of the proposed legislation was even too far for Washington, D.C. Restaurants in the District opposed Initiative 77 because this ballot initiative applied the $15 minimum wage requirement to tipped workers. Although the initiative was approved by voters, the Council of the District of Columbia repealed the initiative in October 2018 because of the negative impact it would have on the District’s restaurant industry. The end result of this bill would be reduced employment and reduced hours, as well as higher prices for virtually all consumer products. Low-skill and entry-level workers will ultimately take most of the hit.
"Nay" votes scored. - 29: On Passage: Generational Theft Act, H.R. 3877✔ Nay
Key Vote 29: On Passage: Generational Theft Act, H.R. 3877
The so-called "Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019," which would be more appropriately named the "Generational Theft Act," will increase the discretionary spending caps by more $320 billion over two fiscal years and suspend the debt limit through July 31, 2021. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), discretionary spending would be $1.119 trillion in FY 2020 and $1.145 trillion in FY 2021. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 would increase discretionary spending to $1.290 trillion in FY 2020 and $1.298 trillion in FY 2021. In total, this is a more than $320 billion spending increase over two fiscal years. Additionally, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 also includes $156.5 billion over two fiscal years for overseas contingency operations (OCO), which is used by Congress to bypass the discretionary spending caps. Prior to this budget deal, the CBO projected that the budget deficit would be $892 billion for FY 2020 and $962 billion in FY 2021. The discretionary spending levels in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 guarantee a return to $1 trillion budget deficits. Making matters worse, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 suspends the debt limit through July 31, 2021, providing the Department of the Treasury with a virtual blank check to borrow, accumulating more debt that future generations will have to shoulder. This deal on the discretionary spending caps is nothing short of a surrender by Republican “leadership” in the House and Senate and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. Of course, we’ll be told that spending cuts will be on the agenda when Republicans get control of Congress again. Sadly, those promises never seem to come to pass. After all, Republican “leadership” and rank-and-file members don’t have any intention of governing by the limited government rhetoric on which they campaign. Instead, these Republicans vote with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) for higher spending and more debt.
"Nay" votes scored. Triple Score - 30: On Passage: Continuing Appropriations Act, H.R. 4378✘ Yea
Key Vote 30: On Passage: Continuing Appropriations Act, H.R. 4378
The Continuing Appropriations Act, H.R. 4378, would fund the federal government through November 21, 2019. The continued practice of governance by CR merely sets up another showdown where Congress will be pushed into enacting a massive last-second spending binge before they can go home for the holidays. It will continue spending at near-record deficit levels, while simultaneously including a host of program reauthorizations that ought to have been considered, and potentially amended, on their own. This spending continues at a level that will shortly lead us back to trillion-dollar annual deficits, while the national debt limit remains suspended through 2021, granting the federal government a blank check to tax future generations through spending money it does not possess.
"Nay" votes scored. - 31: On Passage: Corporate Transparency Act, H.R. 2513✔ Nay
Key Vote 31: On Passage: Corporate Transparency Act, H.R. 2513
The Corporate Transparency Act, H.R. 2513, is framed as legislation that would crack down on fraudulent shell companies and money laundering, but the bill would actually do little to do this, instead simply creating five new federal crimes for paperwork violations for all companies in America, unduly burdening perfectly legitimate businesses. Additionally, the bill may have long-term privacy implications.
"Nay" votes scored. - 32: On the Continuing Resolution, H.R. 3055✔ Nay
Key Vote 32: On the Continuing Resolution, H.R. 3055
This CR continues to kick the can down the road on the congressional appropriations process and highlights just how dysfunctional Congress is when it comes to funding the government. Additionally, the CR extends certain nutritional programs (including Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) as well as various health provisions including Medicaid and Medicare, repeals rescission of highway funding that were set to be rescinded in 2020, and temporarily reauthorizes Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act.
"Nay" votes scored. - 33: On Passage: Pelosi's Socialist Drug Pricing Plan, H.R. 3✔ Nay
Key Vote 33: On Passage: Pelosi's Socialist Drug Pricing Plan, H.R. 3
This proposal would implement a government price fixing scheme based on drug prices in foreign nations. Under the Pelosi Plan, drug prices would be capped at 120 percent of prices in a basket of six nations, chosen on a seemingly arbitrary basis. Not only would this be a tacit admission that command-and-control, single-payer systems are somehow more effective, it would begin the process of importing the same inefficiencies of those systems to the U.S. We cannot afford drug shortages, longer wait times, and less innovation.
"Nay" votes scored. - 34: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1158✘ Yea
Key Vote 34: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1158
Together, the FY 2020 spending bills, H.R. 1865 and H.R. 1158, total nearly $1.4 trillion in spending that flies far above the caps that Congress set for itself less than a decade ago meant to at least restrain spending. This has been continually ignored and voted away by members too afraid to practice the fiscal responsibility they preach and sell to voters on the campaign trail. Many of those same members will, unfortunately, vote for these packages as well. As we have now surpassed $23 trillion in national debt, there is already a mounting price to pay for Washington’s reckless fiscal “policy,” if it can be called that. The “policy” of both parties seems to be simply spending more and more without regard to the debt drag that this creates in our economy, let alone the fiscal crisis that slowly but surely will consume our country should we continue down this path.
"Nay" votes scored. - 35: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1865✘ Yea
Key Vote 35: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1865
Together, the FY 2020 spending bills, H.R. 1865 and H.R. 1158, total nearly $1.4 trillion in spending that flies far above the caps that Congress set for itself less than a decade ago meant to at least restrain spending. This has been continually ignored and voted away by members too afraid to practice the fiscal responsibility they preach and sell to voters on the campaign trail. Many of those same members will, unfortunately, vote for these packages as well. As we have now surpassed $23 trillion in national debt, there is already a mounting price to pay for Washington’s reckless fiscal “policy,” if it can be called that. The “policy” of both parties seems to be simply spending more and more without regard to the debt drag that this creates in our economy, let alone the fiscal crisis that slowly but surely will consume our country should we continue down this path.
"Nay" votes scored. - 36: On Agreeing to Article I of the Articles of Impeachment, H.Res. 755✔ Nay
Key Vote 36: On Agreeing to Article I of the Articles of Impeachment, H.Res. 755
Article I of the H.Res. 755 is the "abuse of power" allegation against President Trump. The impeachment proceeding against President Trump was unprecedented and unfair. The impeachment proceeding was a sham and has been the goal of House Democrats since President Trump took office.
"Nay" votes scored. - 37: On Agreeing to Article II of the Articles of Impeachment, H.Res. 755✔ Nay
Key Vote 37: On Agreeing to Article II of the Articles of Impeachment, H.Res. 755
Article I of the H.Res. 755 is the "obstruction of Congress" allegation against President Trump. The impeachment proceeding against President Trump was unprecedented and unfair. The impeachment proceeding was a sham and has been the goal of House Democrats since President Trump took office.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2018: 115th Congress 36%
- 1: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Amash Amendment (USA RIGHTS Act) to S. 139✘ Nay
Key Vote 1: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Amash Amendment (USA RIGHTS Act) to S. 139
The USA RIGHTS Act would prohibit the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from querying information gathered through Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) without obtaining a warrant. It would also provide narrow exceptions, such as the case of life-threatening emergencies or if the target has consented to a query followed by a warrant. The amendment codifies the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s (FISC) ban on “abouts” collection. The National Security Agency (NSA) was forced to end “abouts” collection after the FISC determined that it was inconsistent with the Fourth Amendment. Additionally, the USA RIGHTS Act, sponsored as an amendment to S. 139 as an amendment by Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), would prohibit reverse targeting, the collection of domestic communications, and the use of information obtained through Section 702 in criminal and civil court cases. It also brings a number of other important reforms to strengthen the oversight of the FISC and promote transparency.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: On Passage: FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act, S. 139✘ Yea
Key Vote 2: On Passage: FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act, S. 139
Despite some tweaks to the original text produced by the House Select Committee on Intelligence, the FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act continues to represent an assault on the Fourth Amendment. The Bill of Rights is a cornerstone of our constitutional republic, and crucial to defending the civil liberties of all American citizens. FISA has caused damage to the Fourth Amendment for years, and now is a critical time to support genuine reform, such as the USA RIGHTS Act. The revised version of the FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act remains the exact opposite of reform, and it is worse than current law. The bill would continue the backdoor search, with an utterly meaningless “warrant requirement.” The caveats proposed to this purported “warrant requirement” are an end-run around the Fourth Amendment. The bill provides a path for the National Security Agency (NSA) to restart the practice of “abouts” collection. This means if a U.S. person mentions a potential surveillance target in a communication, the NSA can collect it, regardless of whether or not the U.S. person was communicating with anyone associated with the target. When the NSA was forced to end “abouts” collection, a judge on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) wrote that the practice raised “a very serious Fourth Amendment issue.” The judge also criticized the NSA for “an institutional lack of candor” for failing to disclose rule violations.
"Nay" votes scored. - 3: DeSantis-Budd Letter Urging a Public Vote to Reinstate Earmarks✘ Nay
Key Vote 3: DeSantis-Budd Letter Urging a Public Vote to Reinstate Earmarks
Reps. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.) and Ted Budd (R-N.C.) have spearheaded a letter that urges House Republican leaders to hold a public vote to reinstate earmarks, should the House Republican Conference move forward on the tone-deaf notion of reinstating earmarks. Put simply, there must be a public and transparent process, including a recorded vote. The American public has a right to know which members are voting to reopen the favor factory by bringing back this currency of corruption. (Signers updated as of February 14, 2018.)
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: On Motion to Concur: Bipartisan Budget Act, H.R. 1892✘ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Motion to Concur: Bipartisan Budget Act, H.R. 1892
The Schumer-McConnell spending deal, the Bipartisan Budget Act, is the worst-case scenario for fiscal conservatives under a Democratic president and Democrat-controlled Congress, but it is happening under a Republican president and Republican Congress. This is reckless spending, and a massive tax hike on future generations, made under the guise of “bipartisan negotiations.” This is deceitful, aggressive overspending by those elected to protect taxpayers. Leaving Americans with higher budget deficits likely over $1 trillion, and a national debt that will balloon to over $21 trillion, is no way to govern, and its weight falls squarely on the shoulders of taxpayers. This deal makes clear that Republicans only care about deficits and out-of-control federal spending under a Democratic president. With a Republican president and Republican control of the House and Senate, there is no other conclusion that one can possibly draw.
"Nay" votes scored. Triple Score - 5: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Walters Amendment to H.R. 1865✘ Yea
Key Vote 5: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Walters Amendment to H.R. 1865
The Walters amendment would establish that Section 230 of the CDA does not impair or limit actions taken against internet service providers for sex trafficking cases in which an internet service provider “knowingly assist[s], support[s], or facilitat[es]” a violation of sex trafficking laws. For something that sounds reasonable, it is quite the opposite. The inclusion of an overbroad “knowledge” standard has been abused again and again in other areas, such as copyright law, and will undoubtedly be abused in this case. Even if passed, there is strong reason to believe that the law would be ineffective, and even counterproductive. The abusable “knowledge” standard actually will actually have the opposite of its intended effect -- disincentivizing those already working proactively to monitor content online to stop sex trafficking, by opening up their practices to legal liabilities.
"Nay" votes scored. - 6: On Agreeing to the Resolution: Rule Providing for Consideration of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1625✘ Yea
Key Vote 6: On Agreeing to the Resolution: Rule Providing for Consideration of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1625
H.Res. 796 is the rule governing the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The underlying bill is a consolidated appropriations bill packed with unrelated legislative items that Congress has not been able to pass. We oppose the rule governing the underlying bill because of the process by which leadership wrote the bill. The process by which this omnibus has been written was awful. After taking the gavel on October 29, 2015, Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said, “When we rush to pass a bill that a lot of us don't understand, we are not doing our job.” In a separate speech a week later, on November 5, Speaker Ryan said, “[T]the way I am trying to do this job is the way that I always thought it should have been done, and that is to make this a more open process so that every citizen in this country, through their elected representatives, has an opportunity to make a difference.” This omnibus was written behind closed doors, with few privy to what exactly was going in it. The bill is also more than a week behind schedule. Originally, it was supposed to be released the week of March 12, with a vote by the end of the week. That didn’t happen. Leadership hoped to vote on the bill Wednesday of this week, but last second negotiations have continued to delay the release of the bill. Now, because of the delays to pack this bill with items unrelated to appropriations, leadership plans to waive the “three-day” rule – Rule XXI, Clause II of the Rules of the House of Representatives – which requires that bills and resolutions be available for parts of three calendar days. Members and their staff will have less than 24 hours to review the 2,232-page omnibus before they are expected to vote on the bill. What’s more, the rule governing the omnibus prevents amendments from being offered from the floor. This has been an all too common theme for legislation brought to the floor. Because this bill spends nearly $1.3 trillion, a more open, deliberative process is needed. Leadership may argue that there isn’t enough time to vote on amendments, but they have only themselves to blame for the time constraints. This is legislative malpractice, and it simply can’t continue.
"Nay" votes scored. - 7: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1625✘ Yea
Key Vote 7: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1625
Process aside, the spending levels appropriated in the bill are nothing short of fiscally disastrous. In February, Congress passed the Bipartisan Budget Act, H.R. 1892. This two-year budget agreement blew through the spending caps by nearly four times more than the 2013 two-year budget deal and nearly five times more than the 2015 two-year budget deal. This omnibus is an extension of the Bipartisan Budget Act. It appropriates discretionary spending at $1.291 trillion – $700 billion for defense and $591 billion for nondefense – which is $143 billion above the spending levels, or caps, established by the Budget Control Act for discretionary spending levels.
"Nay" votes scored. Triple Score - 8: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 4✘ Nay
Key Vote 8: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 4
The amendment, sponsored by Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.), would strike section 451 of the bill, which authorizes the Essential Air Service (EAS). The original purpose of EAS was to be a small program dedicated to ensuring rural communities had access to some form of air service after the airline deregulation of the 1970s. However, it has since ballooned into a wasteful program that costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars every year. Most of the money EAS spends subsidizes rural airports that service fewer than 30 passengers per day. This despite the fact that, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), 99.95 percent of people live within 120 miles of an airport. The EAS is no longer serving its purpose and is wasting taxpayer money to fund an initiative for which there is no longer any legitimate demand. Repealing section 451 would save the taxpayers $1 billion over the next five years.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: On Passage: Indirect Auto Lending CRA Resolution of Disapproval, S.J.Res. 57✔ Yea
Key Vote 9: On Passage: Indirect Auto Lending CRA Resolution of Disapproval, S.J.Res. 57
The passage of this CRA would do nothing to change the prohibition against discrimination in the Equal Credit Opportunity Act that the guidance cites. It would simply roll back the gross regulatory overreach of the CFPB in claiming for itself -- behind closed doors and a screen of smoke -- a power that Congress, in the law that created the CFPB, explicitly banned the CFPB from having. As Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) said prior to the Senate vote, the CFPB “had to work its magic to find a way to regulate auto dealers.” Good governing is done through accountable and transparent processes, not magic.
"Yea" votes scored. - 10: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Foxx Sugar Modernization to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2 ✘ Nay
Key Vote 10: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Foxx Sugar Modernization to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2
Sponsored by Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) and a group of nine other bipartisan legislators, this amendment reforms U.S. sugar policy. Raw sugar in the U.S. currently costs 84 percent more than it does on the world market. This is because of almost Soviet levels of government controls placed on the domestic sugar market that limits imports and production. This increases prices on consumers and makes it difficult for candy companies to maintain operations in America. The sugar modernization amendment is a long overdue reversal of this disturbing, protectionist trend.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Massie Raw Milk Freedom to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Massie Raw Milk Freedom to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2
Sponsored by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), and Jared Polis (D-Colo.), this amendment prevents federal officials from interfering with the sales and transportation of unpasteurized milk across state lines. This ensures that nothing will get in the way of people who want fresh, unpasteurized milk, and those farmers who want to sell it to them.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks WOTUS Repeal to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2✔ Yea
Key Vote 12: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Banks WOTUS Repeal to the Farm Bill, H.R. 2
Sponsored by Reps. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), and a coalition of over a dozen other lawmakers, this amendment repeals the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Clean Water Rule, which loosely defines “waters of the United States.” This rule violated private citizens’ property rights by giving the EPA authority to regulate waterways as small as a ditch in someone’s backyard. Repeal of this rule would be a victory for individual liberty.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: On Passage: Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act, S. 204✔ Yea
Key Vote 13: On Passage: Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act, S. 204
This bill would allow terminally ill patients to have access to potentially life-saving drugs when no other alternatives exist. It would ensure Americans, currently hampered by the bureaucracy of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), have the most fundamental right of all: to fight to save their own lives.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: On Passage: Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act, S. 2155✔ Yea
Key Vote 14: On Passage: Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act, S. 2155
The bill would provide targeted relief in the banking industry from onerous regulatory overreach into the financial sector created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, commonly known as “Dodd-Frank.” Having passed the Senate already, passage in the House would send the bill directly to President Trump’s desk to provide regulatory relief from this onerous law, affecting millions of Americans.
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: On Passage: Spending Cuts to Expired and Unnecessary Programs Act, H.R. 3✘ Nay
Key Vote 15: On Passage: Spending Cuts to Expired and Unnecessary Programs Act, H.R. 3
Approving this initial $15 billion rescissions request in full -- pulling back funds sitting in useless accounts that can only otherwise be used to spend more in the future -- is a task that conservatives in Congress should wholeheartedly endorse. It is one of few opportunities to exercise any semblance of fiscal discipline. It is only one small step towards actually tackling Washington’s out-of-control spending addiction, but it represents a chance to begin this fight.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gohmert Amendment to H.R. 5895✘ Nay
Key Vote 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gohmert Amendment to H.R. 5895
This amendment, sponsored by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), would eliminate funding for the Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E), as requested in President Trump’s budget proposal both this year and last year. As the administration has explained, ARPA-E overlaps with research and development being carried out that should be done by the private sector and is therefore not only unnecessary, but wasteful.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to H.R. 5895✘ Nay
Key Vote 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to H.R. 5895
This amendment, sponsored by Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), would provide for a 1 percent cut across the board to the bill’s spending levels, exempting certain accounts, like the Capitol Police.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: On Agreeing to the Norman Amendment to H.R. 5895✘ Nay
Key Vote 18: On Agreeing to the Norman Amendment to H.R. 5895
Sponsored by Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), this amendment would reduce the total amount of appropriations made available by $1.5 billion to match the fiscal year 2018 enacted level. Increasingly high spending levels appropriated by Congress year after year have buried our country in unsustainable debt. This amendment would realize the fact that our country needs to spend less and certainly cannot afford to spend any more than it did in fiscal year 2018.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: On Agreeing to the Mullin-Perry Amendment to H.R. 6147✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: On Agreeing to the Mullin-Perry Amendment to H.R. 6147
Sponsored by Reps. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) and Scott Perry (R-Pa.), this amendment would prohibit the use of funding for the enforcement of the EPA’s Methane Rule. The EPA estimates the annual cost of the Methane Rule at $520 million.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: On Agreeing to the Hice Amendment to H.R. 6147✘ Nay
Key Vote 20: On Agreeing to the Hice Amendment to H.R. 6147
Sponsored by Rep. Jody Hice (R-Ga.), this amendment would ensure that no funds would be available to the Environmental Justice Small Grants made by the Office of Environmental Justice (OEJ). These funds have been misused to fund projects that should be left to state and local leadership, and that are unrelated to the organization’s mission. If enacted, the Hice amendment will save taxpayers $70 million over the next ten years.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: On Agreeing to the Palmer-Walker-Meadows Amendment to H.R. 6147✔ Yea
Key Vote 21: On Agreeing to the Palmer-Walker-Meadows Amendment to H.R. 6147
Sponsored by Reps. Gary Palmer (R-Ala.), Mark Walker (R-N.C.), and Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), this amendment would prohibit the use of funds from being used to implement the District of Columbia's recently passed Health Insurance Requirement Amendment Act.
"Yea" votes scored. - 22: On Agreeing to the Meadows Amendment to H.R. 6147✔ Yea
Key Vote 22: On Agreeing to the Meadows Amendment to H.R. 6147
Sponsored by Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), this amendment would prohibit the use of funds to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) from being used to administer ObamaCare’s Multi-State Plan (MSP) Program. Section 1334 of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires that OPM contract at least two national health insurance plans, one of which is statutorily required to be contracted with a nonprofit entity. The MSP Program was included in ObamaCare when the so-called “public option” proved politically untenable. The MSP Program could be used as a vehicle for a public option.
"Yea" votes scored. - 23: On Agreeing to the Anti-Carbon Tax Resolution✔ Yea
Key Vote 23: On Agreeing to the Anti-Carbon Tax Resolution
Carbon taxes, like all government interventions in the economy, reward certain individuals and industries at the expense of everyone else. Independent studies into the potential impact of such a tax reveal that American families would have to pay higher electricity and fuel costs, and could lead to higher prices in other areas of the economy. This burden would be borne disproportionately by lower and middle income families, those who can least afford to do so.
"Yea" votes scored. - 24: On Agreeing to the Conference Report to H.R. 6157✘ Yea
Key Vote 24: On Agreeing to the Conference Report to H.R. 6157
The Defense, Labor, and Health and Human Services (HHS) minibus, H.R. 6157 spends profligately on programs included in the minibus and includes a short-term continuing resolution (CR) for remaining appropriations bills into fiscal year 2019. This CR is an extension of the excessive spending agreed to under the Bipartisan Budget Act, which was passed by Congress in February and spent nearly $300 billion more than the previously established spending caps meant to control the rate of spending growth. H.R. 6157 is more of the same profligate spending resulting from a broken budget process and members unwilling to stand up for their campaign promises of shrinking government and reducing spending.
"Nay" votes scored. - 25: On Passage: Protecting Family and Small Business Tax Cuts Act, H.R. 6760✔ Yea
Key Vote 25: On Passage: Protecting Family and Small Business Tax Cuts Act, H.R. 6760
The Protecting Family and Small Business Tax Cuts Act makes permanent the individual and pass-through business tax reforms under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which was signed into law in December 2017.
"Yea" votes scored. - 26: On Agreeing to the Conference Report for the Farm Bill, H.R. 2✘ Yea
Key Vote 26: On Agreeing to the Conference Report for the Farm Bill, H.R. 2
Given our current out-of-control government spending, American taxpayers cannot afford to continue to use billions of dollars to prop up failing agri-businesses. The subsidies programs, as bloated and wasteful as they are now, will increase in cost by over one billion over the next ten years. This is inexcusable given our crushing national debt.
"Nay" votes scored. - 27: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: First Step Act, S. 756✔ Yea
Key Vote 27: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: First Step Act, S. 756
The First Step Act would reform the federal criminal justice system to make our communities safer by reducing crime and focusing limited resources on the most dangerous offenders. By increasing access to and instituting incentives for inmate participation in recidivism reduction programming and by modestly modifying some sentencing laws, the First Step Act would provide much-needed changes to the federal criminal justice system. The bill would reform four areas of sentencing law by reforming 18 U.S.C. 924(c) stacking to clarify that enhancements for second and subsequent offenses are used only on those who are true recidivists, by tailoring 21 U.S.C. 841 to modify mandatory minimum sentence enhancements and those who they may apply to, by applying the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 retroactively, and by expanding the existing federal safety valve for judges sentencing individuals with little to no criminal history.
"Yea" votes scored. - 28: Signers to the Discharge Petition for H.Res. 873✔ Nay
Key Vote 28: Signers to the Discharge Petition for H.Res. 873
If passed, this petition would pave the way for the return of the Obama administration’s heavy-handed Internet regulations, which were overturned by the Restoring Internet Freedom Order. FreedomWorks will key vote the signers of this petition, treating signatures as an anti-freedom position for the purposes of our 2018 Congressional Scorecard.
"Nay" votes scored. Double Score - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2017: 115th Congress 53%
- 1: On Passage: REINS Act - H.R. 26✔ Yea
Key Vote 1: On Passage: REINS Act - H.R. 26
Introduced by Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.), the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act requires congressional approval for economically significant rules promulgated by federal regulatory agencies. Rules defined as economically significant have an annual impact of $100 million or more. The Obama administration finalized more than 600 economically significant rules in less than eight years. The REINS Act brings a crucial check on executive power, reduces the influence of federal regulatory agencies, and begins to reclaim Congress’ constitutional power as the sole lawmaking authority under the Constitution.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: On Passage: Regulatory Accountability Act - H.R. 5✔ Yea
Key Vote 2: On Passage: Regulatory Accountability Act - H.R. 5
Introduced by Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), the Regulatory Accountability Act seeks to reform the regulatory process, making it more transparent for the American people and more accountable to Congress. It also includes language to reverse the Chevron deference, which has been used by regulatory agencies to enact law without judicial review.
"Yea" votes scored. - 3: On Passage: H.J. Res 41 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the SEC's Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule✔ Yea
Key Vote 3: On Passage: H.J. Res 41 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the SEC's Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule
This resolution of disapproval of the Congressional Review Act nullifies the Securities and Exchange Commission's Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers rule. Promulgated under the authority of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, or Dodd-Frank, this rule requires resource extraction issuers to include in annual reports the payment of any entity controlled by the regulated business to foreign governments or the United States government "for the purpose of the commercial development of oil, natural gas, or minerals." The Securities and Exchange Commission projects initial compliance costs between $239 million and $700 million and annual compliance costs between $96 million and $591 million.
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: On Passage: H.J.Res. 38 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Department of the Interior's Stream Protection Rule✔ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Passage: H.J.Res. 38 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Department of the Interior's Stream Protection Rule
This resolution of disapproval of the Congressional Review Act nullifies the Department of the Interior's Stream Protection Rule. With an annual estimated cost of $81 million, according to the Department of the Interior's Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, the Stream Protection Rule is another blow to the coal industry, which was a favorite target of the Obama administration. The National Mining Association estimates that rule will lead to billions of dollars in lost revenues to state and local governments, as well as the loss of between 113,000 and 280,000 jobs.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: On Passage: H.J. Res. 37 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the DOD, GSA, and NASA Federal Acquisition Regulation✔ Yea
Key Vote 5: On Passage: H.J. Res. 37 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the DOD, GSA, and NASA Federal Acquisition Regulation
This resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review Act nullifies a the Department of Defense, the General Services Administration, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's relating to the Federal Acquisition Regulation. This regulation requires federal contractors to disclose decisions on the reporting of violations of federal labor laws and creates paycheck transparency protections for employees of federal contractors. The rule is expected to cost employers $458.3 million in the first year, $413.7 million in the second year, and between $398.5 million and $400 million annually thereafter.
"Yea" votes scored. - 6: On Passage: H.J.Res. 36 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Bureau of Land Management’s Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation Rule✔ Yea
Key Vote 6: On Passage: H.J.Res. 36 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Bureau of Land Management’s Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation Rule
This resolution of disapproval of the Congressional Review Act nullifies Bureau of Land Management’s Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation Rule. With annual compliance costs between $114 million and $279 million, the so-called “venting and flaring” rule purports to reduce waste from “reduce the waste of natural gas from mineral leases administered” by the Bureau of Land Management. In reality, the purpose of the rule is to discourage oil and gas production on land overseen by the agency. The Bureau of Land Management estimates annual compliance costs between $114 million and $279 million.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: On Passage: H.J.Res. 57 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Department of Education's Accountability and State Plans Rule✔ Yea
Key Vote 7: On Passage: H.J.Res. 57 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the Department of Education's Accountability and State Plans Rule
This resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review Act, which gives Congress authority to effectively nullify regulations submitted for review by federal agencies within 60 legislative days, would cancel the Department of Education’s Accountability and State Plans Rule. The Department of Education’s Accountability and State Plans Rule implements part of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and leaves open a loophole that federal bureaucrats could exploit to force Common Core on states that haven't implemented the standards. Education officials from several states and local jurisdictions strongly opposed the rule when it was being crafted.
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: On Passage: H.R. 372 - Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act ✔ Yea
Key Vote 8: On Passage: H.R. 372 - Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act
Introduced by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), the Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act would eliminate the antitrust exemption the health insurance industry currently has under the McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945. One of the main problems with the health care system today is the protections put in place by the federal government that cater to special interest groups. The Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act promotes the free market and competition by changing a law put in place nearly 70 years ago to reflect the current market we have today. It would also ensure that the health insurance industry complies with the same laws other businesses do.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: On Passage: H.R. 1101 - Small Business Health Fairness Act ✔ Yea
Key Vote 9: On Passage: H.R. 1101 - Small Business Health Fairness Act
The Small Business Health Fairness Act, H.R. 1101, sponsored by Rep. Sam Johnson (R-Texas), would allow small businesses to join together through association health plans (AHPs) to provide employees with more affordable health insurance coverage. ObamaCare has caused the cost of health insurance coverage to rise, making it difficult for small businesses to continue offering health insurance coverage to employees. The Small Business Health Fairness Act would help level the playing field for small businesses, which don’t have the negotiating power of larger firms and exemptions under Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and lower administrative costs related to health insurance.
"Yea" votes scored. - 10: On Passage: Consolidated Appropriations Act - H.R. 244✘ Yea
Key Vote 10: On Passage: Consolidated Appropriations Act - H.R. 244
The process for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, which funds the federal government for the remainder of FY 2017, could not have been worse. This massive, nearly 1,700-page spending measure was negotiated behind closed doors between congressional leadership from both chambers and appropriators. With a Republican-controlled Congress and a Republican president, this spending bill reflects Obama-era spending levels. The bill annualizes base discretionary spending for FY 2017 at $1.07 trillion. This spending level blows through the spending caps established by the Budget Control Act of 2011 by $30 billion. The bill spends an additional $106 billion for overseas contingency operations, disaster relief, and other spending, which isn’t counted toward the spending caps. In total, the bill authorizes more than $1.175 trillion in annualized discretionary spending for FY 2017. The bill also falls short of promoting conservative priorities. While the bill does renew the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program and does not include funding for ObamaCare’s cost-sharing subsidies, it allocates nearly $296 million to bail out Puerto Rico’s Medicaid program, preserves current spending levels for the Environmental Protection Agency, increases spending for the National Institutes of Health and the National Endowment for the Arts, and provides a bailout for a private sector labor union.
"Nay" votes scored. Double Score - 11: On Passage: Probation Officer Protection Act - H.R. 1039✘ Yea
Key Vote 11: On Passage: Probation Officer Protection Act - H.R. 1039
While there is a need to protect law enforcement officers who are performing their duties, the Probation Officer Protection Act is an answer in search of a problem. Interference with a federal probation officer is already unlawful and current law already allows a law enforcement officer to arrest an individual or individuals who obstruct a federal probation officer during the performance of their duties. The instances in which third parties obstruct a federal probation officer are rare. While probationers have lost some of their Fourth Amendment rights, third parties have not. The Probation Officer Protection Act could lead to instances in which the Fourth Amendments rights of third parties are infringed because of overly broad language in Section 2(b) or interpretations of words in it, such as “intimidation” or “interference.” Additionally, the “rules and regulations” under which the arrest authority of federal probation officers will be determined by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, not by Congress. This creates yet another situation in which Congress is relenting its constitutional authority to another branch of the federal government.
"Nay" votes scored. - 12: On Passage: Financial CHOICE Act - H.R. 10✔ Yea
Key Vote 12: On Passage: Financial CHOICE Act - H.R. 10
The Financial CHOICE Act would eliminate the job-killing regulations that Dodd-Frank has instituted, rein in the CFPB, increase penalties for financial institutions who engage in illicit practices, and provide other reforms necessary to address the issues that earlier “well intentioned” legislation instituted. While we are disappointed and frustrated that language in the bill that would have repealed the Durbin amendment was removed by the House Rules Committee, if passed, the Financial CHOICE Act will open up the market in the financial sector that would help create jobs and invite new businesses. This will drive compliance costs down, increase the number of banks that will be created, and provide the necessary oversight to the federal government.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 2810✔ Yea
Key Vote 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 2810
Sponsored by Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif,), the amendment would strike the proposed prohibition against another round of Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC). A 2013 report by the conservative American Enterprise Institute (AEI) estimated that the first four rounds of BRAC save approximately $8 billion annually. The 2005 BRAC is saving nearly $4 billion annually.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gosar Amendment to H.R. 2810✘ Nay
Key Vote 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gosar Amendment to H.R. 2810
Sponsored by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), the amendment would require that Secretary of Labor conduct determinations for the prevailing wage for defense-related construction projects. Currently, the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division uses survey data that is unreliable and inflates the prevailing wage. The amendment would lower the cost of defense-related construction projects, saving taxpayers money.
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: On Passage: H.J.Res. 111 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the CFPB's Arbitration Rule✔ Yea
Key Vote 15: On Passage: H.J.Res. 111 - Resolution of Disapproval Against the CFPB's Arbitration Rule
This resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review Act (CRA) would cancel the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) arbitration rule. The CFPB’s arbitration rule is a giveaway to trial lawyers. The rule ostensibly bans contractual arbitration clauses related to consumer financial products offered by banks and other financial sector firms. This severely limits consumers’ ability to enter into arbitration during disputes. Trbitration is an easier and quicker process for consumers to resolve issues, but lawyers don’t make much money from this process. The rule, however, will encourage trial lawyers to pursue more class-action lawsuits, which take longer and result in smaller payouts to consumers.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Griffith Amendment to H.R. 3219✔ Yea
Key Vote 16: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Griffith Amendment to H.R. 3219
Sponsored by Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-Va.), this amendment would eliminate the CBO’s Budget Analysis Division. The amendment transfers the authority of the division to the Director of the CBO.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to H.R. 3219✘ Nay
Key Vote 17: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to H.R. 3219
Sponsored by Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), this amendment would make a 1 percent across the board rescission to Division D of H.R. 3219 – the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: Discharge Petition for H.Res. 458 - 2015-Style ObamaCare Repeal✘ Nay
Key Vote 18: Discharge Petition for H.Res. 458 - 2015-Style ObamaCare Repeal
For the better part of a decade, congressional Republicans pledged to repeal ObamaCare. Between 2011 and 2015, the House passed legislation to fully repeal ObamaCare on four separate occasions before eventually using reconciliation for partial repeal. Roughly 18 months ago, the House passed the Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act, H.R. 3762, with only three Republican defections. The bill repealed as much of ObamaCare as possible under the rules of reconciliation, including the tax and cost sharing subsidies, Medicaid expansion, and the taxes that came with the law. The bill would have reduced the federal budget deficit by $516 billion over ten years. House Republicans must continue to work diligently to repeal ObamaCare. With the American health insurance system facing so many problems because of ObamaCare – among which are skyrocketing premiums and fewer choices in the non-group market – Republicans can’t give up. A discharge petition is a legislative tool that requires the signatures of 218 members of the House to immediately bring a bill to the floor for a vote.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 3354✘ Nay
Key Vote 19: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.), this amendment would reduce funding for the Essential Air Service program by $150 million and transfer the savings to the Spending Reduction Account. The Essential Air Service subsidizes flights to small communities in the United States and its territories. These flights, however, are often half full or mostly empty, within driving distance, and heavily subsidized.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Budd Amendment to H.R. 3354✔ Yea
Key Vote 20: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Budd Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Ted Budd (R-N.C.), this amendment would eliminate a planned $900 million earmark for an upgrade of an Amtrak rail line between Newark, New Jersey and New York City. Supposedly, the House has a moratorium on earmarks. Yet, this would be one of the largest ever included in an appropriations package. This amendment would redirect $474 million to deficit reduction and $400 million to New Starts Account.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Brooks Amendment to H.R. 3354✘ Nay
Key Vote 21: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Brooks Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.), this amendment would defund Amtrak, a federally funded passenger railroad service. Amtrak routinely loses money, failing to cover its operating costs through fares paid by passengers. This amendment would save $1.1 billion.
"Yea" votes scored. - 22: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Biggs Amendment to H.R. 3354✔ Yea
Key Vote 22: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Biggs Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), this amendment would cut funding for the Environmental Protection Administration’s (EPA) Environmental Programs and Management Account by $10.234 million and redirect the savings to the EPA’s Spending Reduction Account.
"Yea" votes scored. - 23: On Motion to Concur to the Senate Amendment to H.R. 601 - To Increase the Debt Limit✘ Yea
Key Vote 23: On Motion to Concur to the Senate Amendment to H.R. 601 - To Increase the Debt Limit
As amended by the Senate, H.R. 601 would increase the debt limit and fund the federal government through December 8 without any spending or regulatory reforms. There are no guarantees that the situation will be any different when Congress revisits the issue in December. We have reached a critical point. At a time when grassroots conservative engagement is essential to pass priorities like fundamental tax reform, the administration and a Republican-controlled Congress are playing right into the hands of leftists like Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi. A debt limit increase without any spending or regulatory reforms would only further anger grassroots conservatives, risking their support for other priorities.
"Nay" votes scored. - 24: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to Division A of H.R. 3354✘ Nay
Key Vote 24: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to Division A of H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), this amendment would make a 1 percent across the board rescission to Division A, which authorizes appropriations for Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies.
"Yea" votes scored. - 25: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Norman Amendment to H.R. 3354✔ Yea
Key Vote 25: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Norman Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), this amendment would reduce the appropriation to the EPA for FY 2018 by $1.869 billion.
"Yea" votes scored. - 26: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Grothman Amendment to H.R. 3354✘ Nay
Key Vote 26: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Grothman Amendment to H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Wis.), this amendment would reduce the funding for the National Labor Relations Board (NRLB) by $99 million and transfer the savings to the Spending Reduction Account.
"Yea" votes scored. - 27: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to Division F of H.R. 3354✘ Nay
Key Vote 27: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Blackburn Amendment to Division F of H.R. 3354
Sponsored by Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), this amendment would make a 1 percent across the board rescission to Division F, which authorizes appropriations for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies.
"Yea" votes scored. - 28: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.Con.Res. 71 - FY 2018 Budget Resolution✘ Nay
Key Vote 28: On Agreeing to the Amendment: McClintock Amendment to H.Con.Res. 71 - FY 2018 Budget Resolution
The Republican Study Committee’s (RSC) FY 2018 budget, introduced as an amendment by Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.), would reduce federal spending by more than $10 trillion over the ten-year budget window, bringing the budget into balance in FY 2023. The RSC’s budget would repeal ObamaCare and enact other patient-centered health insurance reforms, make Social Security and Medicare solvent, and reform federal welfare programs. It also promotes free trade, regulatory reform, and other free market, limited government principles. The current text of H.Con.Res. 71 and the McClintock amendment include language that allows the House Ways and Means Committee to produce legislation to reform the tax code. Riddled with loopholes and special interest deductions, America’s tax code has become far too complex. According to the Tax Foundation, Americans spent 8.9 billion hours and $409 billion complying with the more than 74,000-page tax code.
"Yea" votes scored. - 29: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree: $36.5 Billion of Disaster Relief Funding Without Spending Offsets✘ Yea
Key Vote 29: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree: $36.5 Billion of Disaster Relief Funding Without Spending Offsets
No one disagrees with the need for assistance for areas recently impacted by disasters. Nevertheless, the concern with the Additional Supplement Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act is that Congress is spending money without any spending offsets. In fact, the manner by which the bill will be brought to the House floor for consideration prohibits amendments that could offset the $36.5 billion appropriated. Currently, the national debt is $20.4 trillion. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the projected budget deficit for FY 2017 and FY is $804 billion and $855 billion, respectively. Congress is only a few years away from the $1+ trillion deficits that Republicans frequently and rightly criticized under President Barack Obama. Long-term projections are even more ominous from a budgetary perspective. Sadly, Congress is once again avoiding difficult choices at the expense of future generations.
"Nay" votes scored. - 30: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment to H.Con.Res. 71: FY 2018 Budget Resolution✔ Yea
Key Vote 30: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment to H.Con.Res. 71: FY 2018 Budget Resolution
The budget resolution contains reconciliation instructions that allow the House Ways and Means Committee to produce legislation for fundamental tax reform. It has been more than 30 years since Congress passed fundamental tax reform. Since that time, the tax code has become riddled with carve-outs that benefit politically connected special interests. Today, there are more than 74,000 pages in the tax code. According to the Tax Foundation, Americans spent 8.9 billion hours and $409 billion on tax compliance in 2016. Congress has a generational opportunity to reform the tax code by consolidating and lowering tax rates, broadening the tax base, and promoting job creation and international competitiveness for American businesses. This will make the tax code fairer and simplify the filing process, allowing the vast majority of Americans to file their taxes on a postcard.
"Yea" votes scored. - 31: On Agreeing to the Conference Report: Tax Cuts and Jobs Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 31: On Agreeing to the Conference Report: Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act lowers individual rates for the vast majority of taxpayers. In addition, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act nearly doubles the standard deduction, meaning Americans keep more of their hard-earned money, and doubles the child tax credit from $1,000 to $2,000. This bill also provides relief by doubling the exemption amount from the unfair death tax. Pass-through business owners, who file their taxes on their individual tax return, will be able to take a 20 percent deduction. This lowers the tax burden currently faced by pass-through businesses, which, according to the Tax Foundation, employ 70 million people, and promotes fairness. America’s business community will also see added growth as a result of the policy changes in this bill. The corporate tax rate will be lowered substantially from 35 percent to 21 percent, making American businesses more globally competitive and allowing them the resources they need to innovate and create jobs. It also eliminates confusion and complexity so job creators can focus on building their company and hiring working Americans. This bill also repeals the harmful ObamaCare individual mandate, a coercive tax on Americans. It’s estimated that 80 percent of households subject to this tax earn less than $50,000 per year. This is an unnecessary hardship being placed on working Americans. The federal government should not punish individuals who cannot afford ObamaCare’s costly health insurance plans or decide it is not the best course for them.
"Yea" votes scored. - 32: On Passage: $81 Billion of Disaster Relief Funding Without Spending Offsets✘ Yea
Key Vote 32: On Passage: $81 Billion of Disaster Relief Funding Without Spending Offsets
House Republicans have long championed fiscal responsibility and opposed deficit spending. Unfortunately, this measure runs contrary to both of those promises, and would have devastating effects to our economy. Additionally, there is little accountability to ensure that the funds appropriated will be effectively used. The bill provides a staggering $81 billion dollars for disaster relief with absolutely no offsetting cuts in other areas. This is the largest request for a single disaster relief package in United States history. Congress must make corresponding, necessary cuts to ensure that if this relief package is necessary, our economy is not adversely impacted as a result. In addition, this amount of money is excessive and wasteful. It is nearly double the $44 billion that the White House initially requested. It is also substantially larger than each of the standalone disaster relief packages that were passed after Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, $60 billion and $50.6 billion, respectively. This is not to mention that this new disaster relief bill comes in addition to the $52 billion already spent this year on Hurricanes Irma, Maria, and on wildfire relief.
"Nay" votes scored. Double Score - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2016: 114th Congress 63%
- 1: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment: H.R. 3762 - Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act of 2015✔ Yea
Key Vote 1: On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment: H.R. 3762 - Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act of 2015
This bill uses the budget procedure known as "reconciliation" to repeal most of ObamaCare. The greater portion of ObamaCare's worst portions are included in this repeal bill, including its many new taxes, the unconstitutional individual and employer mandates, the expansion of Medicaid, and the insurance premium subsidies. Passing this bill laid out the blueprint for how Congress would achieve full repeal once President Obama leaves the White House.
"Yea" votes scored. Triple Score - 2: Override of the President's Veto of the Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act ✔ Yea
Key Vote 2: Override of the President's Veto of the Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act
This vote was to override President Barack Obama's veto of the Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act, which would have repealed ObamaCare through reconciliation.
"Yea" votes scored. Triple Score - 3: On Passage: H.R. 2017 - Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act of 2015✔ Yea
Key Vote 3: On Passage: H.R. 2017 - Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act of 2015
The Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act relaxed FDA regulations that required business owners who own 20 or more restaurants to provide calorie information on their menus. This is costly one-size-fits-all regulation, made possible by ObamaCare, that will cost business owners $1 billion.
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 699 - Email Privacy Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 699 - Email Privacy Act
The Email Privacy Act would amend the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (ECPA) to protect the privacy of email communications by requiring a warrant to access emails and other covered electronic communications by American citizens that are in the custody of a service provider and more than 180 days old. H.R. 699 passed the House Judiciary Committee by a unanimous vote. This legislation is an important step in protecting the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans against unreasonable searches and seizures and updating our laws for the 21st Century.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: On Passage: H.R. 5053 - Preventing IRS Abuse and Protecting Free Speech Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 5: On Passage: H.R. 5053 - Preventing IRS Abuse and Protecting Free Speech Act
This legislation is an important step in protecting the First Amendment rights of Americans against harassment and coercion from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Introduced by Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.), this bill stops the IRS from collecting and releasing information about donors to tax-exempt organizations, which would chill political speech. The legislation would protect the free speech of donors to nonprofit organizations by modifying IRS disclosure requirements of information such as donor names and addresses. Under H.R. 5053, tax-exempt organizations are required to report only information on donors who contribute $5,000 or more and who are either an officer of the organization or one of its five highest paid employees.
"Yea" votes scored. - 6: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Sanford Amendment to H.R. 5293✘ Nay
Key Vote 6: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Sanford Amendment to H.R. 5293
H. Amdt. 1194 offered by Rep. Mark Sanford (R-S.C.), to H.R. 5293, to the Department of Defense Appropriations Act 2017, would retain the U.S. military’s current practice of providing cash stipend to recruits, allowing them to pick the footwear of their personal preference. The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), passed by the House and Senate in May, changed current practice regarding footwear by including a “buy American” requirement, replacing the current cash allowance. This new language is a de facto earmark because it benefits one company: New Balance. The Department of Defense has concluded that the new language in the NDAA “would directly lead to a higher recruit injury rate at basic training,” The amendment would undo the New Balance provision, and halt an egregious example of crony capitalism that will cost taxpayers over $300 million and keeps this provision from coming into effect by not backing it.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Massie Amendment to H.R. 5293✘ Nay
Key Vote 7: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Massie Amendment to H.R. 5293
H. Amdt. 1204 offered by Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), to H.R. 5293, to the Department of Defense Appropriations Act 2017, protects the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans from unauthorized searches and seizures of property. The bill in its current form requires the National Security Agency and other intelligence agencies to follow due process and obtain a warrant to collect the communications of American citizens. Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) was written to only allow the government to collect the communications of foreigners, but a large quantity of American communications are bundled in during the process. By prohibiting backdoor spying, this measure represents a step forward in the battle to ensure privacy and security in the face of unconstitutional surveillance. The amendment also prohibits government agencies from requesting that U.S. companies build security vulnerabilities into their hardware or software in order to make it easier for the government to access them
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Buck Amendment to H.R. 5485✘ Nay
Key Vote 8: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Buck Amendment to H.R. 5485
H. Amdt. 1243 offered by Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.)) which “reduces the salary of the IRS Commissioner to $0 annually from date of enactment through January 20, 2017;”
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gosar Amendment to H.R. 5485✔ Yea
Key Vote 9: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Gosar Amendment to H.R. 5485
H. Amdt. 1249 offered by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) which “prohibits funds the use of funds to pay a performance bonus to any senior IRS employee
"Yea" votes scored. - 10: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Duffy Amendment to H.R. 5485✔ Yea
Key Vote 10: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Duffy Amendment to H.R. 5485
H. Amdt. 1245 by Rep. Sean Duffy (R-Wis.) which “prohibits funds from being used to implement, administer, or enforce a new regulatory action of $100 million or more;”
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 5606 - Anti-terrorism Information Sharing Is Strength Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 11: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 5606 - Anti-terrorism Information Sharing Is Strength Act
The Anti-terrorism Information Sharing Is Strength Act expands Section 314 of the USA PATRIOT Act to a host of domestic crimes that have nothing to do with terrorism. The bill also surrenders more rulemaking authority to the Treasury Department at a time when the regulatory state is out of control.
"Nay" votes scored. - 12: On Passage: H.R. 4768 - Separation of Powers Restoration Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 12: On Passage: H.R. 4768 - Separation of Powers Restoration Act
This bill modifies the scope of judicial review of agency actions to authorize courts reviewing agency actions to decide de novo (without giving deference to the agency's interpretation) all relevant questions of law, including the interpretation of constitutional and statutory provisions, and rules made by agencies.
"Yea" votes scored. Double Score - 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Perry Amendment to H.R. 5538✘ Nay
Key Vote 13: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Perry Amendment to H.R. 5538
H. Amdt.1346 offered by Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) which “reduces Appropriations made in this Act for the Environmental Protection Agency by 17 percent.” The cost of EPA’s Clean Power Plan to Pennsylvania consumers would be shifted back to the EPA under this statement
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Palmer Amendment to H.R. 5538✔ Yea
Key Vote 14: On Agreeing to the Amendment: Palmer Amendment to H.R. 5538
H. Amdt. 1342 offered by Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala.) which “ensures that none of the funds made available by this Act may be used for the Environmental Protection Agency’s Criminal Enforcement Division.” The cost and extent of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Criminal Enforcement Division are addressed by this amendment
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: On Agreeing to the Amendment: King Amendment to H.R. 5538✘ Nay
Key Vote 15: On Agreeing to the Amendment: King Amendment to H.R. 5538
H. Amdt. 1330 offered by Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) which “ensures that no funds appropriated by this Act can be used to implement, administer, or enforce Davis-Bacon prevailing rate wage requirements.”
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 5523 - Clyde-Hirsch-Sowers RESPECT Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 16: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 5523 - Clyde-Hirsch-Sowers RESPECT Act
In March 2015, the DOJ restricted the use of civil asset forfeiture in cases where structuring -- in which a bank account holder makes frequent deposits below $10,000 -- is the only offense suspected. Civil asset forfeiture is a pernicious form of government overreach by which federal agencies can seize cash or property without ever arresting, charging or prosecuting someone of a crime. The Clyde-Hirsch-Sowers RESPECT Act codified this administrative change.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On Agreeing to the Senate Amendment: H.R. 5325 - Continuing Resolution to December 9, 2016✘ Yea
Key Vote 17: On Agreeing to the Senate Amendment: H.R. 5325 - Continuing Resolution to December 9, 2016
The continuing resolution through December 9, 2016 triggers a lame duck session of Congress, which is designed to bolster the failed Beltway practice of legislating at the expense of the American taxpayers instead of for them. The CR will continue this pattern of irresponsible spending by forcing a new spending measure to be considered in a lame duck when the current session of Congress is wrapping up and members are at their least accountable.
"Nay" votes scored. - 18: On Motion to Refer: H.Res. 828 -- Impeachment Resolution Against IRS Commissioner John Koskinen ✘ Yea
Key Vote 18: On Motion to Refer: H.Res. 828 -- Impeachment Resolution Against IRS Commissioner John Koskinen
The motion to refer was a procedural move made by Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) to block H.Res. 828 from consideration on the floor of the House. The motion sent the resolution to the House Judiciary Committee, effectively killing it in the 114th Congress. In September, FreedomWorks reserved the right to key vote against any motion that would prevent the resolution consideration. The commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is appointed to a five-year term. John Koskinen took office in December 2013, meaning that he could, theoretically, continue to hold his current post in the next administration.
"Nay" votes scored. - 19: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 4919 - Kevin and Avonte's Law✘ Yea
Key Vote 19: On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass: H.R. 4919 - Kevin and Avonte's Law
While this bill may have good intentions, there should not be federal intervention. The bill does not properly limit the rulemaking authority of the DOJ, and rather, opens shortens the amount of time available to examine and debate the content. “Federal standards must respect the ‘civil rights and liberties’ of people being tracked, including their Fourth Amendment rights. Data collected must be used ‘solely for the purpose of preventing injury or death.’” We cannot risk civil liberties or allow our privacies to be ignored.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2015: 114th Congress 57%
- 1: On Passage: H.R. 596 - To Fully Repeal ObamaCare ✔ Yea
Key Vote 1: On Passage: H.R. 596 - To Fully Repeal ObamaCare
This bill fully repeals all of ObamaCare and also directs the relevant House committees to draft a patient-centered health care reform proposal to replace it. ObamaCare has failed to either make health insurance more affordable or to improve access or quality of care, and must be repealed in order to enact real reforms to accomplish those goals.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 72 to H.R. 749 - To End Federal Amtrak Subsidies✘ Nay
Key Vote 2: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 72 to H.R. 749 - To End Federal Amtrak Subsidies
This amendment by Rep. Tom McClintock would completely end the federal subsidies for Amtrak. In spite of billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies, Amtrak has continued to run an inefficient service that racks up massive annual losses, and should not continue being propped up by the government.
"Yea" votes scored. - 3: On Passage: H.R. 1105 - Death Tax Repeal Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 3: On Passage: H.R. 1105 - Death Tax Repeal Act
This bill would fully repeal the federal estate tax, better known to most as the "death tax". Not only does the death tax represent double (or more) taxation of an individual's property and belongings, it can also destroy individually owned family farms and small businesses.
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: On Passage: H.R. 1560 - Protecting Cyber Networks Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Passage: H.R. 1560 - Protecting Cyber Networks Act
While this bill is intended to make information sharing on cyber threats easier, it also sacrifices many privacy protections in the process. The bill fails to ensure that companies and government agencies are not sharing personally identifiable information when they report cyber attacks. Worse, the bill requires that cyber threat information be shared with the NSA. Although well-intentioned, the privacy loopholes in this bill turn in from a "cybersecurity" bill to a "cybersurveillance" bill.
"Nay" votes scored. - 5: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 172 to H.R. 2028: To Reduce Spending in Energy and Water by $2.95 Billion✘ Nay
Key Vote 5: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 172 to H.R. 2028: To Reduce Spending in Energy and Water by $2.95 Billion
This amendment by Rep. Tom McClintock would eliminate the Department of Energy funding for the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and Fossil Energy programs, and would sharply reduce funding for nuclear energy programs. Removing these market-distorting subsidies would save nearly $3 billion.
"Yea" votes scored. - 6: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 503 to H.R. 2685 - To Limit Surveillance of U.S. Citizens Under Section 702 of FISA✘ Nay
Key Vote 6: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 503 to H.R. 2685 - To Limit Surveillance of U.S. Citizens Under Section 702 of FISA
Currently, the NSA and FBI can access the electronic communications of U.S. citizens collected without a specific warrant under section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. This amendment by Reps. Massie and Lofgren would defund those activities. It would also prevent the NSA from requesting that security vulnerabilities be built into private products.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: On Passage: H.R. 2042 - Ratepayer Protection Act of 2015✔ Yea
Key Vote 7: On Passage: H.R. 2042 - Ratepayer Protection Act of 2015
This bill would delay the EPA from implementing their economically devastating new greenhouse gas emissions rule for existing power plants. If implemented, this rule would cause many coal-fired power plants to shut down, dramatically increasing energy costs for millions of Americans.
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 53 to H.R. 5 - To prevent the Secretary of Education from using grants or waivers to coerce states into adopting or keeping Common Core or other national standards.✔ Yea
Key Vote 8: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 53 to H.R. 5 - To prevent the Secretary of Education from using grants or waivers to coerce states into adopting or keeping Common Core or other national standards.
This amendment by Rep. Zeldin would greatly strengthen current prohibitions against coercing states to adopt national educational standards. Specifically, it prohibits the Secretary of Education from conditioning any grant money or waivers upon states keeping Common Core or any other specific national curriculum standards.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 64 to H.R. 5 - To establish grants for early childhood education programs in the states✘ Yea
Key Vote 9: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 64 to H.R. 5 - To establish grants for early childhood education programs in the states
This amendment by Rep. Polis (introduced for Rep. Meng) would establish grants to entice states to subsidize early childhood education (Head Start) programs. This would entail an effective federalization of pre-K education at taxpayer expense. Not only does the federal government have no place centralizing yet another aspect of education, repeated studies have shown that Head Start and similar pre-K education programs are ineffective.
"Nay" votes scored. - 10: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 656 to H.R. 6 - To ensure that new spending under H.R. 6 counts as normal spending that counts towards the budget caps✘ Nay
Key Vote 10: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 656 to H.R. 6 - To ensure that new spending under H.R. 6 counts as normal spending that counts towards the budget caps
As written, H.R. 6 would create nearly $2 billion per year in new mandatory spending (not subject to budget caps). This amendment by Rep. Brat would force Congress to account for the new spending under the Budget Control Act caps and therefore to find equivalent cuts elsewhere.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: On Passage: H.R. 427 - Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 11: On Passage: H.R. 427 - Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act
This bill, entitled the “REINS Act”, would require a vote in Congress on any “major” regulation (over $100 million in economic impact) issued by the executive branch before it could be enforced on the American people. The REINS Act would thus restore much of Congress' lawmaking authority that it has ceded to the executive branch over the past century.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: Discharge Petition to Bring a Reauthorization of the U.S. Export-Import Bank Directly to the House Floor☐ Did Not Vote
Key Vote 12: Discharge Petition to Bring a Reauthorization of the U.S. Export-Import Bank Directly to the House Floor
In an uncommon move, 218 Members of the House of Representatives signed a discharge petition regarding H.R. 597 - a bill to reauthorize the Export-Import Bank of the United States. This successful petition bypasses the House Committee on Finance, in which the bill had been stalled, bringing the bill straight to the House floor. The Export-Import bank serves as a taxpayer-backed conduit for corporate welfare, and should be left expired. Only signers of the petition are scored for this vote.
"Nay" votes scored. - 13: On the Amendment: H.Admt. 713 to H.R. 702 - To remove additional Maritime Security Fleet funding✘ Nay
Key Vote 13: On the Amendment: H.Admt. 713 to H.R. 702 - To remove additional Maritime Security Fleet funding
This amendment by Rep. Justin Amash would remove the section of the bill that would provide $500 million in new spending for the Maritime Security Fleet program. This new spending, while a relatively small amount was quietly added into the bill without any vote, ignoring the amendment and committee process. This spending represents a shallow attempt to court a narrow special interest group to gain votes for the bill - essentially violating the House ban on earmarks.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: On Passage: H.R. 597 - Reform Exports and Expand the American Economy Act (Ex-Im Re-Authorization)✔ Nay
Key Vote 14: On Passage: H.R. 597 - Reform Exports and Expand the American Economy Act (Ex-Im Re-Authorization)
This bill would reauthorize the U.S. Export-Import Bank through 2019. The Ex-Im Bank's loans and guarantees distort trade markets, and mostly flow to a small number of immense, politically connected corporations. Congress allowed the Ex-Im Bank's charter to expire in June, and this 80-year-old corporate welfare program should stay closed.
"Nay" votes scored. - 15: On Motion that the House Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: H.R. 1314 - Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015✔ Nay
Key Vote 15: On Motion that the House Concur in the Senate Amendment with an Amendment: H.R. 1314 - Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015
This bill was the vehicle for the budget agreement that will spend $80 billion beyond the Budget Control Act caps over two years, along with $16 billion in new defense spending that doesn't count towards the caps. The supposed offsets to this spending are mostly either gimmicks or long-term, while the new deficit spending is immediate. The bill also suspends the debt ceiling through March of 2017, effectively giving the government a blank check for that period.
"Nay" votes scored. Double Score - 16: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 787 to H.R. 22 - To prevent funds in this act from being used to enforce Davis-Bacon wage controls✘ Nay
Key Vote 16: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 787 to H.R. 22 - To prevent funds in this act from being used to enforce Davis-Bacon wage controls
This amendment by Rep. Steve King would effectively prevent Davis-Bacon wage controls from applying to the infrastructure projects funded by this highway funding bill. These onerous wage requirement were designed to shut out competition with unions for federal contracts, and end up costing taxpayers huge sums of money.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On Passage: S.J.Res. 24 - Disapproving of the EPA Rule to Increase Emissions Standards for Existing Power Plants✔ Yea
Key Vote 17: On Passage: S.J.Res. 24 - Disapproving of the EPA Rule to Increase Emissions Standards for Existing Power Plants
This resolution invokes the Congressional Act to disapprove of the recent EPA rule that greatly increases emissions restrictions on existing coal-fired power plants. This tremendously destructive regulation would greatly increase energy costs in the many states which rely heavily upon coal-fired power plants for their electricity. These cost increases damage overall economic growth, and in particular lower the standard of living of lower-income earners.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: On Passage: S.J.Res 23 - Disapproving of the EPA Rule to Increase Emissions Standards for New Power Plants✔ Yea
Key Vote 18: On Passage: S.J.Res 23 - Disapproving of the EPA Rule to Increase Emissions Standards for New Power Plants
This resolution invokes the Congressional Act to disapprove of the recent EPA rule that greatly increases emissions restrictions on any future coal-fired power plants. This rule tightens emissions standards to the point where it will likely not be economically feasible to build new coal-fired electric plants, crippling one of the most abundant and cost-effective sources of energy in America.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 861 to H.R. 8 - To Lift the Ban on U.S. Crude Oil Exports✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 861 to H.R. 8 - To Lift the Ban on U.S. Crude Oil Exports
This amendment by Rep. Joe Barton would finally lift the decades-old ban on exporting U.S. crude oil. This would allow the U.S. to take better advantage of our recent major surge in oil production, creating thousands of new jobs and boosting economic growth in the process.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: On the Conference Report: H.R. 22 - Highway Funding Bill & Ex-Im Reauthorization✘ Yea
Key Vote 20: On the Conference Report: H.R. 22 - Highway Funding Bill & Ex-Im Reauthorization
This bill would renew federal highway funding to states for a period of five years. However, it does not solve the structural deficit within the Highway Trust Fund, doesn't eliminate the wasteful spending that takes away from funding roads, and doesn't offset that spending in any real way. Furthermore, this bill contains a reauthorization of the expired Export-Import Bank, in order to prevent having a standalone vote on renewing such a direct corporate welfare fund.
"Nay" votes scored. - 21: On Passage: H.R. 2029 - Consolidated Appropriations Act (Omnibus)✔ Nay
Key Vote 21: On Passage: H.R. 2029 - Consolidated Appropriations Act (Omnibus)
This omnibus appropriations bills for Fiscal Year 2016 funds former Speaker Boehner's budget-busting deal to the tune of $50 billion above the budget caps for 2016. It contains several very troubling legislative riders a well, including more funding for the IMF, and a massive new cybersecurity information sharing program that violates consumers' privacy and due process. It also fails to include most of the amendments from the appropriations process that would have defunded key, harmful federal regulations.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2014: 113th Congress 57%
- 1: Concurring with Senate Amendments: H.R. 3547 - Omnibus Appropriations for Fiscal Year 2014✘ Yea
Key Vote 1: Concurring with Senate Amendments: H.R. 3547 - Omnibus Appropriations for Fiscal Year 2014
This bill funded the federal government for the remainder of the fiscal year (through September, 2014). It spends $45 billion more than the budget caps established in 2011, and perpetuates a vast amount of wasteful spending from previous years. Lawmakers were also given almost no time to read this 1,500 page spending bill.
"Nay" votes scored. - 2: On the Conference Report: H.R. 2642 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)✘ Yea
Key Vote 2: On the Conference Report: H.R. 2642 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)
This final version of the Farm Bill, reconciled between the House and Senate, actually undoes some of the already modest reforms to crop insurance and food stamps that were previously in the bill. This five-year reauthorization of the Farm Bill will spend nearly a trillion dollars over ten years, and remains loaded with corporate welfare and special carve-outs for well-connected agricultural corporations.
"Nay" votes scored. - 3: On Passage: S. 540 - Temporary Debt Limit Extension Act✔ Nay
Key Vote 3: On Passage: S. 540 - Temporary Debt Limit Extension Act
This bill suspends the debt limit until March 15th of 2015, allowing the president to potentially run up as much debt as he pleases during that time period. The debt is already projected to increase by about $1 trillion over that period, to over $18 trillion. Meanwhile, this debt ceiling suspension contains no reforms to curb spending whatsoever.
"Nay" votes scored. - 4: On Passage: H.R. 1944 - Private Property Rights Protection Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 4: On Passage: H.R. 1944 - Private Property Rights Protection Act
This bill would effectively undo the damaging Supreme Court decision in the case of Kelo v. New London, which held that the government can redistribute property from one individual to another if it serves a community's "economic development. The bill stops federal, state, and local governments from exercising eminent domain to seize private property for the purpose of "economic development" or any other transfer from a private owner to another private entity. It also provides legal rights for property owners to sue the government for abuse of eminent domain.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: On Passage: H.R. 3865 - Stop Targeting of Political Beliefs by the IRS Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 5: On Passage: H.R. 3865 - Stop Targeting of Political Beliefs by the IRS Act
This bill would stop the IRS for one year from finalizing a proposed regulation that would stop grassroots non-profit groups from engaging in political free speech. On the heels of the IRS targeting of conservative groups, the regulation that this bill would delay would seemingly finish their job by excluding tea parties and other grassroots groups from any role in the political process.
"Yea" votes scored. - 6: On Passage: H.R. 3370 - Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 6: On Passage: H.R. 3370 - Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act
This bill would delay a major reform to the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) that would have returned some semblance of market rates to flood insurance premiums. Currently, NFIP is over $25 billion in debt because homeowners in frequently flooded areas do not have to pay an amount that is equal to the risk they incur, meaning that the government takes a loss when the inevitable floods occur. By delaying the scheduled reforms, the NFIP will require a taxpayer bailout for billions of dollars.
"Nay" votes scored. - 7: On Passage: H.R. 4118 - SIMPLE Fairness Act (One-year Delay of ObamaCare's Individual Mandate)✔ Yea
Key Vote 7: On Passage: H.R. 4118 - SIMPLE Fairness Act (One-year Delay of ObamaCare's Individual Mandate)
Delaying Obamacare's unconstitutional individual insurance mandate extends the same exception to the law that was extended to businesses with the delay of the employer mandate. This delay would also prevent Obamacare from taking full effect, and provides an extended window to work on defunding, delaying, or dismantling the entire law.
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: On Passage: H.R. 3826 - Electricity Security and Affordability Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 8: On Passage: H.R. 3826 - Electricity Security and Affordability Act
This bill would stop the EPA from imposing proposed regulations that would effectively ban new coal-fired power plants from ever being constructed. It would require the EPA to take into account current achievable technologies from existing plants when setting future emission reductions, stopping them from promulgating impossible regulations that would kill the coal industry.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: On Passage: H.R. 1871 - Baseline Reform Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 9: On Passage: H.R. 1871 - Baseline Reform Act
This bill would require that all government budget calculations be made based upon the spending levels for the current fiscal year. Currently, budget projections assume an automatic increase in federal spending based upon the rate of inflation, meaning that even stopping the growth of federal spending would be scored as a cut. Baseline budgeting would force Congress to account for this "automatic" growth of government spending honestly.
"Yea" votes scored. - 10: On the Amendment: H.Amdt 671 to H.R. 4435 - Preventing NDAA funds from being used to implement climate change initiatives✔ Yea
Key Vote 10: On the Amendment: H.Amdt 671 to H.R. 4435 - Preventing NDAA funds from being used to implement climate change initiatives
This amendment specifically prevents Defense funding from being used to implement any climate change recommendations that are based upon controversial international and U.S. scientific assessments, including the IPCC's 5th Assessment Report, the U.S. Global Change Research Program National Climate Assessment, or the United Nations Agenda 21 sustainable development plan.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 696 to H.R. 4660 - To eliminate the Economic Development Administration✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 696 to H.R. 4660 - To eliminate the Economic Development Administration
This amendment by Rep. Mike Pompeo would eliminate the Economic Development Administration, a Great Society creation that has turned into a de facto backdoor earmark program.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 742 to H.R. 4660 - To reduce funding for CJS Appropriations by 1%✘ Nay
Key Vote 12: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 742 to H.R. 4660 - To reduce funding for CJS Appropriations by 1%
This amendment by Rep. Marsha Blackburn would reduce the spending levels in the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies appropriations bill by 1% across the board, with the exception of funding for the FBI.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 815 to H.R. 4745 - To prohibit federal funds for the purchase of license plate cameras✔ Yea
Key Vote 13: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 815 to H.R. 4745 - To prohibit federal funds for the purchase of license plate cameras
This amendment by Rep. John Fleming would prevent federal funding for state and local license plate scanning programs. Mass scanning of license plates has the potential to be as invasive of individuals' privacy as the NSA's phone data collection, and should not be subsidized federally.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 824 to H.R. 4745 - To cut T-HUD spending by 1%✘ Nay
Key Vote 14: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 824 to H.R. 4745 - To cut T-HUD spending by 1%
This amendment by Rep. Marsha Blackburn would cut spending from Transportation and Housing & Urban Development appropriations bill by 1% across the board.
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 935 to H.R. 4870 - To restrict agencies from accessing U.S. citizens' communications metadata✔ Yea
Key Vote 15: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 935 to H.R. 4870 - To restrict agencies from accessing U.S. citizens' communications metadata
This amendment by Rep. Thomas Massie requires the NSA and other intelligence agencies to obtain specific warrants in order to access communications metadata collected on American citizens. It also stops intelligence agencies from using "backdoor" security vulnerabilities to access companies' data.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 992 to H.R. 4923 - To reduce or eliminate funding for three Department of Energy programs✘ Nay
Key Vote 16: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 992 to H.R. 4923 - To reduce or eliminate funding for three Department of Energy programs
This amendment by Rep. Tom McClintock would eliminate all funding for the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program and the Fossil Energy Research and Development Program, and reduce funding for the Nuclear Energy Programs, saving taxpayers $3.1 billion dollars.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 1049 to H.R. 4923 - To reduce non defense spending in the bill to 2008 levels✘ Nay
Key Vote 17: On the Amendment: H.Amdt. 1049 to H.R. 4923 - To reduce non defense spending in the bill to 2008 levels
This amendment by Rep. Richard Hudson would reduce spending in the Energy & Water Appropriations bill by 7.4831%, which would return spending in the bill to 2008 levels. Defense and nuclear security programs would be exempted from the cut.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: On Passage: H.R. 5021 - Highway and Transportation Funding Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 18: On Passage: H.R. 5021 - Highway and Transportation Funding Act
This bill bails out the nearly depleted Highway Trust Fund through May of 2015, using revenue gimmicks to supposedly offset most of the cost. The Highway Trust fund desperately needs reform instead of merely continuing to receive periodic taxpayer bailouts.
"Nay" votes scored. - 19: On Passage: H.R. 5078 - Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: On Passage: H.R. 5078 - Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act
This bill would stop the Environmental Protection Agency from finalizing a new rule that would allow them to regulate practically any water under the Clean Water Act. The CWA was intended to regulate "navigable waterways", but the EPA wants to be able to regulate everything from irrigation ditches to ponds to dry creek beds - which would massively infringe upon property owners' rights to develop their own land.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: On Passage: H.R. 24 - Federal Reserve Transparency Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 20: On Passage: H.R. 24 - Federal Reserve Transparency Act
This bill would require a full and comprehensive audit of the Federal Reserve. The central bank of the United States has operated in secrecy for over a century, and should be fully open to Congressional and public scrutiny.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: On Passage: H.R. 83 - Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (CRomnibus)✔ Nay
Key Vote 21: On Passage: H.R. 83 - Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (CRomnibus)
This trillion-plus dollar spending bill was crafted behind closed doors and was packed with dozens of policy riders that Congress never had a chance to vote on individually. It continues to fund the federal government fully, with zero reforms to the government's out-of-control spending.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2013: 113th Congress 50%
- 1: H.Amdt. 4 to H.R. 152 - To offset $17 billion of hurricane relief funds by cutting discretionary spending by 1.63%✘ Nay
Key Vote 1: H.Amdt. 4 to H.R. 152 - To offset $17 billion of hurricane relief funds by cutting discretionary spending by 1.63%
The funding for Hurricane Sandy relief efforts was appropriated as "emergency" funding, meaning that it was above and beyond the amount of spending allowed by existing budget caps. This amendment by Rep. Mulvaney would simply offset a large portion of this emergency spending by making a slight, across-the-board reduction in discretionary spending.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: H.Amdt.5 to H.R. 152 - To add $33.677 billion in additional spending.✔ Nay
Key Vote 2: H.Amdt.5 to H.R. 152 - To add $33.677 billion in additional spending.
This amendment, sponsored by Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (NJ-11), would add another $33 billion to the Disaster Relief Act, bringing the total spending in the bill to over $50 billion. Although the bill is supposedly to help the victims of Hurricane Sandy, the better portion of this amendment funds unrelated programs such as community development block grants. The "emergency" spending is also not offset, meaning that it will add to the federal deficit.
"Nay" votes scored. - 3: H.R. 152 - Disaster Relief Appropriations Act✘ Yea
Key Vote 3: H.R. 152 - Disaster Relief Appropriations Act
This bill is an "emergency" appropriations bill that contains $50.1 billion in spending that is supposed to aid those affected by Hurricane Sandy. In reality, however, most of the spending will not provide acute disaster relief, and much of it is not even scheduled to be spent until 2014 or later. Thus, the bill functions more like a stimulus than true disaster relief and its spending should be appropriated through the budget process instead of as emergency spending that adds to the federal deficit.
"Nay" votes scored. - 4: H.R. 325 - To Increase the Debt Limit until May 19th, 2013✘ Yea
Key Vote 4: H.R. 325 - To Increase the Debt Limit until May 19th, 2013
This bill raises the statutory limit on the public debt (the "debt ceiling") by whatever amount is necessary to reach May 19th, 2013. Although the bill theoretically contains a "no budget, no pay" provision conditional upon the Senate passing a budget resolution, in reality the provision has no teeth. FreedomWorks insists that further increases in the debt ceiling by accompanied by proportional decreases in federal spending in order to address the ever-increasing federal debt, which at the time of this bill stood at $16.4 trillion. Instead, this bill amounts to a "clean" debt ceiling hike, accompanied by the unenforceable promise of spending reforms at a later date.
"Nay" votes scored. - 5: H.Res. 99 - Rule providing for consideration of H.R. 933 (the Continuing Resolution to fund the United States government)✘ Yea
Key Vote 5: H.Res. 99 - Rule providing for consideration of H.R. 933 (the Continuing Resolution to fund the United States government)
This closed rule does allow for any extended debate or amendments to the Continuing Resolution, thus allowing a bill that spends at the rate of over $1 trillion per year to be passed without any input from individual Members of Congress on the floor of the House.
"Nay" votes scored. - 6: H.R. 45 - To repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and other Obamacare-related provisions✔ Yea
Key Vote 6: H.R. 45 - To repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and other Obamacare-related provisions
This bill would repeal ObamaCare entirely, stopping the government takeover of our health care. If allowed to take effect, ObamaCare will greatly increase health insurance costs, reduce the quality of care, and eventually lead to direct rationing of care. It also contains unconstitutional mandates that attempt to force people to buy health insurance, an unprecedented use of federal power.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: H.R. 1947 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)✘ Yea
Key Vote 7: H.R. 1947 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)
The so-called "Farm Bill" is actually a combination of agricultural policy and welfare, with food stamps accounting for 80 percent of the bill's nearly trillion dollars in projected spending. Aside from failing to contain the multitude of faults within the rapidly-expanding food welfare programs, the agricultural portion of the bill is an amalgam of direct corporate welfare for insurance companies and farm corporations and special carve-outs and price supports for the specific industries with the best lobbyists.
"Nay" votes scored. - 8: H.Amdt. 258 to H.R. 2609 - To eliminate $1.544 billion from funding for various energy R&D programs✘ Nay
Key Vote 8: H.Amdt. 258 to H.R. 2609 - To eliminate $1.544 billion from funding for various energy R&D programs
This amendment by Rep. McClintock would cut $1.544 billion from various research and development programs for alternative energy. The free market can take care of researching and development the next generation of energy technologies far more efficiently than the federal government can, without the distorting effect of the government picking winners and losers.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: H.R. 2642 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)✘ Yea
Key Vote 9: H.R. 2642 - Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (Farm Bill)
This version of the Farm Bill contains only the actual agricultural side of the earlier bill, leaving food stamps to be considered as their own bill. Unfortunately, this bill actually makes the Farm Bill worse by making the billions in subsidies to farm corporations and dozens of special hand-outs to favored industries permanent, instead of making free market reforms. The bill also still contains the brand new, unnecessary "shallow-loss" crop insurance entitlement, which will actually increase the Farm Bill's cost.
"Nay" votes scored. - 10: H.R. 2668 - Fairness for American Families Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 10: H.R. 2668 - Fairness for American Families Act
This bill would simply delay the enactment of ObamaCare's "individual mandate" for one year, extending the same temporary reprieve for individuals that was granted to businesses when the administration delayed the employer mandate. Delaying the individual mandate effectively forces a delay of the entire law, and buys time to work to defund and dismantle ObamaCare entirely.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: H.Amdt. 413 to H.R. 2397 - to prevent the NSA from blanket metadata collection on Americans without specific authorization.✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: H.Amdt. 413 to H.R. 2397 - to prevent the NSA from blanket metadata collection on Americans without specific authorization.
This amendment to the DoD Appropriations Act, by Rep. Justin Amash (R-MI), protects a basic 4th Amendment right by requiring that the NSA can only gather electronic data from people who are actively under an investigation with approval of the FISA court. This is basic due process under the law - you need a specific warrant to search and seize an individual's physical property; the same should apply to that individual's communications and digital property.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: On the Amendment: H.Amdt.422 to H.R. 2610 - To eliminate the Essential Air Service program✘ Nay
Key Vote 12: On the Amendment: H.Amdt.422 to H.R. 2610 - To eliminate the Essential Air Service program
This amendment to the T-HUD Appropriations bill would eliminate the Essential Air Service program, a wasteful federal subsidy that supports seldom-used rural airfields. This would save taxpayers $100 million.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: H.Amdt. 448 to H.R. 367 - To require that Congress be allowed to vote on any tax or levy upon carbon emissions✔ Yea
Key Vote 13: H.Amdt. 448 to H.R. 367 - To require that Congress be allowed to vote on any tax or levy upon carbon emissions
This amendment by Rep. Scalise (R-LA) effectively prevents the executive branch from levying any form of carbon tax without Congressional approval. Since a carbon tax would be tremendously destructive to the economy as a whole, this measure would hopefully make such a tax far less likely to pass.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: H.R. 367 - Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 14: H.R. 367 - Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act
This bill, entitled the “REINS Act”, would require a vote in Congress on any “major” regulations issued by the executive branch before it could be enforced on the American people. The REINS Act would thus restore accountability and protect citizens’ rights by giving elected officials a voice in all major regulations issued.
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: H.R. 2009 - Keep the IRS Off Your Health Care Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 15: H.R. 2009 - Keep the IRS Off Your Health Care Act
This bill would prevent the IRS from implementing or enforcing any aspect of ObamaCare. Under the law as written, the IRS would have access to a massive new data source called the "Federal Data Services Hub", which would give the IRS employees charged with enforcing ObamaCare's mandates unprecedented access to information about each and every taxpayer. In the wake of multiple scandals in which IRS employees deliberately leaked sensitive personal information on political candidates and groups, it makes little sense to put them in charge or our health care.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: Meadows Letter to Defund ObamaCare through the Continuing Resolution✘ Nay
Key Vote 16: Meadows Letter to Defund ObamaCare through the Continuing Resolution
Congressman Mark Meadows solicited signatures for a letter to Speaker Boehner, asking that the House Republicans stand firm in their commitment to defund ObamaCare through the Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the federal government. Members who signed the letter affirmed their commitment to resist ObamaCare using a must-pass bill (the CR), rather than continuing to take ineffectual, symbolic votes to that effect.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: H.J. Res. 59 - Continuing Resolution (with no funding for ObamaCare)✔ Yea
Key Vote 17: H.J. Res. 59 - Continuing Resolution (with no funding for ObamaCare)
This initial Continuing Resolution offered by the House during the debate over the funding for ObamaCare fully funds the entire federal government except for any further implementation or operation of ObamaCare. The premium increases, dropped insurance policies, and delays of major portions of ObamaCare made clear that this poorly-written law could not succeed, and this Continuing Resolution was the last chance to stop ObamaCare's harmful policies before they took full effect.
"Yea" votes scored. Double Score - 18: To Concur in Senate Amendments: H.R. 2775 - Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014✘ Yea
Key Vote 18: To Concur in Senate Amendments: H.R. 2775 - Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014
H.R. 2775 was used as the vehicle for the Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the federal government. This bill funds the government fully (including ObamaCare) through January 15th of 2014, suspends the debt ceiling completely until February of 2014, and obliges both chambers of Congress to go to conference on a full-year budget. In other words, this CR allows for more uncontrolled spending and debt, with no reforms to either, does nothing to address ObamaCare, and potentially promises more future spending if a budget agreement is reached.
"Nay" votes scored. - 19: H.R. 2728 - Protecting States’ Rights to Promote American Energy Security Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: H.R. 2728 - Protecting States’ Rights to Promote American Energy Security Act
This bill would protect individual states' rights to develop energy resources within their borders by declaring state regulations on hydraulic fracturing to have supremacy over those issued by the federal EPA. Hydraulic fracturing (or "fracking") has proven to be a safe and economical way to develop America's vast natural gas resources, and in those state which choose to allow fracking thousands of new jobs will be created as a result.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: H.R. 1900 - Natural Gas Pipeline Permitting Reform Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 20: H.R. 1900 - Natural Gas Pipeline Permitting Reform Act
This bill simply expedites the permitting process for establishing natural gas pipelines. Currently the federal government has slowed down pipeline construction by as much as several years in many instances, and this bill would require that the permitting process be finished within one year of a permit request being filed.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: On Concurring in the Senate Amendment: H.J.Res. 59 - The Ryan/Murray Budget✔ Nay
Key Vote 21: On Concurring in the Senate Amendment: H.J.Res. 59 - The Ryan/Murray Budget
This is the final House vote to pass the budget deal negotiated by Congressman Paul Ryan and Senator Patty Murray. The deal breaks the budget caps established in 2011 by $63 billion over two years, while claiming to contain a net deficit reduction over ten years by raising fees and making other minor cuts. With no guarantee that future congresses will obey the scheduled spending cuts, this bill delivers increases in both spending and taxes in exchange for no meaningful reforms.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2012: 112th Congress 30%
- 1: H.R. 1173 - Fiscal Responsibility and Retirement Security Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 1: H.R. 1173 - Fiscal Responsibility and Retirement Security Act
The bill would repeal the Community Living Assistance Services and Support (CLASS) Act. The CLASS Act is the long-term care entitlement, which even the Dept. of Health and Human Services admits is prohibitively expensive. Voting to repeal CLASS at this time advances the larger goal of fully repealing President Obama's unworkable Affordable Care Act.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: H.R. 3578 - To amend the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 to reform the budget baseline✔ Yea
Key Vote 2: H.R. 3578 - To amend the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 to reform the budget baseline
The bill would reform the way that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) calculates the baseline spending assumptions that are the basis for all of its projections of future spending. The legislation would remove the assumption from CBO calculations that spending will increase each year in proportion to inflation, which makes Congress’ new spending each year look like less than it is. The Baseline Reform Act would make the federal budget process more honest and transparent.
"Yea" votes scored. - 3: H.R. 4105 - To apply the countervailing duty provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 to nonmarket economy countries✘ Yea
Key Vote 3: H.R. 4105 - To apply the countervailing duty provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 to nonmarket economy countries
FreedomWorks opposes this bill. It would allow the Department of Commerce to continue issuing countervailing duty (CVD) on imports from China, Vietnam and other countries deemed non-market economies (NMEs). H.R. 4105 would hurt U.S. consumers and importers while further escalating a trade war with China. Like other taxes, the cost of tariffs, including “countervailing duties” are only paid by consumers.
"Nay" votes scored. - 4: H.Amdt.1003 to H.Con.Res. 112 - Substitute amendment containing the Republican Study Committee budget for FY 2013✘ Nay
Key Vote 4: H.Amdt.1003 to H.Con.Res. 112 - Substitute amendment containing the Republican Study Committee budget for FY 2013
The amendment would replace Paul Ryan's budget proposal, which does not balance until after 2040, with the Republican Study Committee's alternative proposal, which would balance in five years. The RSC's budget also simplifies the tax code, reforms Medicare and Social Security, and caps federal spending at just below 2008 levels. The RSC budget is the kind of aggressive but workable reform we need in order to get America back on the path to fiscal sustainability.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: H.R. 4628 - To extend student loan interest rates for undergraduate Federal Direct Stafford Loans✘ Yea
Key Vote 5: H.R. 4628 - To extend student loan interest rates for undergraduate Federal Direct Stafford Loans
This bill would keep student loan rates at 3.4 percent instead of allowing them to rise to their 2007 level of 6.8 percent. Artificially keeping student loan rates low not only costs taxpayers billions of dollars, it also distorts markets by encouraging students to take loans that they otherwise may not have been able to afford, which in turn encourages colleges to charge more for tuition.
"Nay" votes scored. - 6: H.Amdt.1039 to H.R. 5326 - to eliminate the Economic Development Administration✘ Nay
Key Vote 6: H.Amdt.1039 to H.R. 5326 - to eliminate the Economic Development Administration
This amendment would eliminate the Economic Development Administration (EDA), which is an obsolete program whose grants are being used by many Members of Congress to essentially create earmarks. Eliminating this useless program would also save over $500 million per year.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: H.Amdt.1065 to H.R. 5326 - to cut Commerce, Science, & Justice appropriations by 1%✘ Nay
Key Vote 7: H.Amdt.1065 to H.R. 5326 - to cut Commerce, Science, & Justice appropriations by 1%
This amendment would cut Commerce, Science & Justice Appropriations across the board by 1%, for an annual savings of $511 million.
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: H.Amdt.1066 to H.R. 5326 - to cut $2.7 billion from selected portions of CJS appropriations.✘ Nay
Key Vote 8: H.Amdt.1066 to H.R. 5326 - to cut $2.7 billion from selected portions of CJS appropriations.
This amendment would reduce spending for each of the agencies funded by this bill by 12.2%, exempting certain key organizations such as the U.S. Marshals and the FBI. This would save $2.7 billion in FY 2014 and apply that money towards reducing the budget deficit.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: To Suspend the Rules and Pass, as Amended: H.R. 2072 - To reauthorize the Export-Import Bank, and for other purposes✘ Yea
Key Vote 9: To Suspend the Rules and Pass, as Amended: H.R. 2072 - To reauthorize the Export-Import Bank, and for other purposes
FreedomWorks opposes reauthorizing the Export-Import bank because it is essentially a corporate welfare program that hands out trade subsidies to politically connected companies. The government could better improve exports by reducing regulations and corporate taxation, which would render American manufacturing more competitive with the rest of the world.
"Nay" votes scored. - 10: H.Amdt.1178 to H.R 5325 - to eliminate the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program.✘ Nay
Key Vote 10: H.Amdt.1178 to H.R 5325 - to eliminate the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program.
This amendment would eliminate the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program, which directly subsidizes green energy companies. This program is pure corporate welfare, with the government picking winners and losers in the energy sector, and eliminating it would save taxpayers $1.45 billion annually.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: H.Amdt. 1185 to H.R. 5325 - To defund the Fossil Fuel Research and Development programs✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: H.Amdt. 1185 to H.R. 5325 - To defund the Fossil Fuel Research and Development programs
This amendment would eliminate much of the Department of Fossil Energy, another federal agency which uses taxpayer dollars to subsidize green energy research. This would save nearly half a billion dollars in 2013, and return more research and development to the private sector where it belongs.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: H.Amdt.1217 to H.R. 5325 - to cut $3.1 billion from Energy and Water appropriations.✘ Nay
Key Vote 12: H.Amdt.1217 to H.R. 5325 - to cut $3.1 billion from Energy and Water appropriations.
This amendment would cut nearly 10% from the Energy and Water Appropriations bill, for an annual savings of $3.1 billion. This cut would comply with the Republican Study Committee's budget, which aims to balance the federal budget in five years.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: Motion to Instruct Conferees: H.R. 4348 - to require that transportation spending be capped.✘ Nay
Key Vote 13: Motion to Instruct Conferees: H.R. 4348 - to require that transportation spending be capped.
This motion by Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA) would instruct the House conferees to insist upon capping highway spending at the amount taken in by the gas tax. The gas tax was intended to be the sole revenue source for the Highway Trust Fund, but the federal government has routinely outspent their revenue supply in the past decades, requiring periodic bailouts of the Trust Fund.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: H.R. 5972 - Making appropriations for the Departments of Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development.✘ Yea
Key Vote 14: H.R. 5972 - Making appropriations for the Departments of Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development.
This bill provides funding for the Departments of Transportation and Housing & Urban Development. It increases funding for such unnecessary programs as Amtrak, the Essential Air Service, and community development block grants. The bill fails to make any real cuts to spending, in spite of the country's massive deficits.
"Nay" votes scored. - 15: On the Conference Report: H.R. 4348 - To provide an extension of Federal-aid highway ... transit, and other programs✘ Yea
Key Vote 15: On the Conference Report: H.R. 4348 - To provide an extension of Federal-aid highway ... transit, and other programs
FreedomWorks opposes this bill because it reauthorizes federal highway spending at a level that far exceeds its revenue from the gas tax. This bill also includes an amendment which continues the artificial lowering of student loan rates, a practice which encourages students to incur debt that they cannot afford to pay back.
"Nay" votes scored. - 16: H.R. 6079 - To repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare)✔ Yea
Key Vote 16: H.R. 6079 - To repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare)
This bill would fully repeal the unaffordable and unpopular health care law popularly known as "ObamaCare". ObamaCare fails to either protect patients or make health care more affordable, and must be repealed and replaced with free-market, patient-centered reforms to bring competition into the industry and drive down costs for all consumers.
"Yea" votes scored. - 17: H.Amdt. 1431 to H.R. 5856 - To cut $1.07 billion from DoD Appropriations✘ Nay
Key Vote 17: H.Amdt. 1431 to H.R. 5856 - To cut $1.07 billion from DoD Appropriations
This amendment selectively cuts $1.07 billion from the Department of Defense's Appropriations, exempting military pay and benefits from any cuts. As the DoD accounts for over 40% of total discretionary spending, targeted cuts in defense spending will be necessary in order to ever balance the budget.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: H.R. 459 - To require a full audit of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal reserve banks ✔ Yea
Key Vote 18: H.R. 459 - To require a full audit of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal reserve banks
This bill would require the Comptroller of the United States to conduct a comprehensive audit of the Federal Reserve, in order to determine where this powerful and notoriously opaque private agency has been allocating the U.S. money supply. Transparency in the Federal Reserve is an essential first step to reestablishing a sound monetary policy.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: H.R. 3409 - Stop the War on Coal Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: H.R. 3409 - Stop the War on Coal Act
This bill would prohibit the Secretary of the Interior from promulgating upcoming regulations that would devastate the coal industry and make it nearly impossible for many companies to develop new mines. Attacking coal development will massively increase the cost of energy over a large portion of the country, further straining resources in the midst of a weak economy.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: On Concurring with the Senate Amendments: H.R. 8 - Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012✔ Nay
Key Vote 20: On Concurring with the Senate Amendments: H.R. 8 - Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012
This bill is the vehicle for the deal brokered by Senator McConnell and Vice President Biden to avert the "fiscal cliff". While it extends the 2001, 2003 and 2009 tax cuts and credits for most Americans, it allows them to expire on those earning over $450,000 per year. The bill also contains a $30 billion extension of unemployment benefits, and reauthorizes the 2008 Farm Bill for nine months. H.R. 8 allows the payroll tax holiday to expire, effectively raising taxes on 77% of taxpayers, yet extends dozens of tax credits and deductions that amount to corporate welfare for special interests. It also fails to extend the Bush-era tax cuts to all Americans, thus raising taxes at a time when economic growth is desperately needed.
"Nay" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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2011: 112th Congress 51%
- 1: H.R. 2 - Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 1: H.R. 2 - Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act
The bill would fully repeal the deeply controversial “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” (ObamaCare) passed in March 2010. ObamaCare will reduce the quality and drive up the cost of health care, and contains an unconstitutional mandate requiring Americans to purchase health care simply because they exist.
"Yea" votes scored. - 2: H.Amdt.16 to H.R. 1 - To cut spending by $450 million✔ Yea
Key Vote 2: H.Amdt.16 to H.R. 1 - To cut spending by $450 million
This amendment would save taxpayers $450 million by cutting the development of the superfluous second engine for the F-35 fighter jet. The military already has one functioning engine for the F-35, and this second design is a wasteful payoff to defense contractors. Even the military says that this program is not necessary.
"Yea" votes scored. - 3: H.Amdt. 45 to H.R. 1 - to cut the EPA's budget by $64 million✔ Yea
Key Vote 3: H.Amdt. 45 to H.R. 1 - to cut the EPA's budget by $64 million
This bill would cut the EPA's science and technology budget by $64 million. EPA programs were given massive increases in funding in 2010, and were clearly over-funded. Many of these programs are redundant and wasteful, funding scientific studies that should be left to academia and the private sector.
"Yea" votes scored. - 4: H.Amdt. 58 to H.R. 1 - saving taxpayers $100 million✘ Nay
Key Vote 4: H.Amdt. 58 to H.R. 1 - saving taxpayers $100 million
This amendment would save taxpayers $100 million by reducing the Child & Family Services entitlement, a program which contains a great deal of fraud and wasted spending.
"Yea" votes scored. - 5: H.Amdt. 102 to H.R. 1 - to prohibit funds to employees who implement ObamaCare✔ Yea
Key Vote 5: H.Amdt. 102 to H.R. 1 - to prohibit funds to employees who implement ObamaCare
This amendment prohibits the use of funds to pay any employee, officer, contractor, or grantee of any department or agency to implement the provisions of The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act also known as "ObamaCare."
"Yea" votes scored. - 6: H.Amdt.104 to H.R. 1 - to stop allocation of funds to Obamacare✔ Yea
Key Vote 6: H.Amdt.104 to H.R. 1 - to stop allocation of funds to Obamacare
This amendment would prevent any funds from H.R. 1 from being allocated to the implementation of the job-killing and unconstitutional bill popularly known as ObamaCare.
"Yea" votes scored. - 7: H.Amdt.105 to H.R. 1 - cutting funding for implementation of ObamaCare✔ Yea
Key Vote 7: H.Amdt.105 to H.R. 1 - cutting funding for implementation of ObamaCare
This amendment specifically disallows any funds from H.R. 1 from being used to pay the salary of any employee working to implement ObamaCare.
"Yea" votes scored. - 8: H.Amdt.106 to H.R. 1 - Denies implementation of the individual mandate of ObamaCare✔ Yea
Key Vote 8: H.Amdt.106 to H.R. 1 - Denies implementation of the individual mandate of ObamaCare
This bill prevents the IRS from being allowed to enforce the penalty under ObamaCare for failing to enroll in a health insurance plan. Basically, this would make the unconstitutional individual mandate in ObamaCare powerless, as there would be no consequences for failing to comply with it.
"Yea" votes scored. - 9: H.Amdt. 111 to H.R. 1 - To reduce discretionary spending to 2008 levels and cut $18.6 billion✘ Nay
Key Vote 9: H.Amdt. 111 to H.R. 1 - To reduce discretionary spending to 2008 levels and cut $18.6 billion
This Republican Study Committee amendment would reduce discretionary spending back to 2008 levels, which would amount to $18.6 billion in cuts in 2011 alone.
"Yea" votes scored. - 10: H.Amdt. 167 to H.R. 1 - to cut non-defense discretionary spending to 2006 levels✘ Nay
Key Vote 10: H.Amdt. 167 to H.R. 1 - to cut non-defense discretionary spending to 2006 levels
This amendment would reduce all non-defense discretionary spending to 2006 levels, saving taxpayers billions of dollars in 2011 alone. This is by far the boldest of the spending cuts offered to the 2011 appropriations bill.
"Yea" votes scored. - 11: H.Amdt.169 to H.R. 1 - to prevent the 2011 budget from being required to pay for inflated union wages✘ Nay
Key Vote 11: H.Amdt.169 to H.R. 1 - to prevent the 2011 budget from being required to pay for inflated union wages
This bill would prevent any projects in the 2011 budget from being required to comply with Davis-Bacon wage requirements. Davis-Bacon is a leftover from the New Deal era which costs taxpayers billions of dollars each year because it requires government contractors to pay "local prevailing wages" for every project, which usually leads to expensive union labor receiving the contracts.
"Yea" votes scored. - 12: H.R. 1 - Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011✔ Yea
Key Vote 12: H.R. 1 - Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011
This omnibus appropriations bill for 2011 includes the largest single discretionary spending cut in history, cutting $106 billion from various programs and departments. While this is only a fraction of the cuts needed to rein in the government’s spending, it is a very good first step in the right direction.
"Yea" votes scored. - 13: H.R. 4 - Small Business Paperwork Mandate Elimination Act of 2011✔ Yea
Key Vote 13: H.R. 4 - Small Business Paperwork Mandate Elimination Act of 2011
This bill eliminates the 1099 reporting mandate from Obamacare. Due to a provision hidden in the 2,400 page health care law passed last March, businesses will be required to submit an IRS form 1099 for all goods and services purchased over $600 starting in 2012. This is a paperwork nightmare that will significantly hurt small businesses and cost an abundance of jobs, and must be repealed.
"Yea" votes scored. - 14: H.R. 830 - FHA Refinance Program Termination Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 14: H.R. 830 - FHA Refinance Program Termination Act
The bill would eliminate the inefficient FHA Refinance Program, saving taxpayers $8 billion. This program, one of the T.A.R.P bailout programs, refinances underwater loans to the FHA, which by the government’s own admission transfers the risk on these bad investments to the taxpayer. This program should never have been created, as it is a clear violation of free market principles.
"Yea" votes scored. - 15: H.R. 836 - To rescind the unobligated funding for the Emergency Mortgage Relief Program and to terminate the program✔ Yea
Key Vote 15: H.R. 836 - To rescind the unobligated funding for the Emergency Mortgage Relief Program and to terminate the program
The bill would end the Department of Housing & Urban Development’s Emergency Homeowners Relief Program, saving taxpayers $1 billion. The program provides high-loss mortgage loan subsidies to people who are very unlikely to be able to pay back the money, which merely delays the inevitable foreclosures and wastes taxpayers’ dollars.
"Yea" votes scored. - 16: H.J.Res. 48 - Making further continuing appropriations for fiscal year 2011, and for other purposes✘ Yea
Key Vote 16: H.J.Res. 48 - Making further continuing appropriations for fiscal year 2011, and for other purposes
This bill contains a Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the federal government. Because the Senate has refused to pass a budget for three years, the government has been funded through these CR’s, continuing our unsustainable levels of deficit spending without even the transparency of the open budget process.
"Nay" votes scored. - 17: H.R. 471 - Scholarships for Opportunity and Results Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 17: H.R. 471 - Scholarships for Opportunity and Results Act
This bill would reauthorize the Washington, D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program, which provided school vouchers to allow parents in failing school districts to send their children to higher-quality schools of their choice. Congress ended this program in 2009 despite its overwhelming success.
"Yea" votes scored. - 18: H.R. 910 - Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011✔ Yea
Key Vote 18: H.R. 910 - Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011
This bill, the “Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011”, would stop Obama's cap and trade scheme by completely stripping the EPA of its ability to use the 'Clean Air Act' to regulate greenhouse gases. This is important legislation that would take serious steps towards addressing high energy costs and ensuring America's energy security.
"Yea" votes scored. - 19: H.J.Res. 37 - Disapproving of the rule submitted by the FCC with respect to regulating the Internet✔ Yea
Key Vote 19: H.J.Res. 37 - Disapproving of the rule submitted by the FCC with respect to regulating the Internet
H.J. Res 37 would prohibit the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) from imposing net neutrality regulations on Internet providers. These job-killing regulations would involve new government controls on the Internet that would have significant implications for investing in innovation and broadband deployment.
"Yea" votes scored. - 20: H.Amdt.258 to H.Con.Res. 34 - To replace the Paul Ryan budget with the RSC's budget✘ Nay
Key Vote 20: H.Amdt.258 to H.Con.Res. 34 - To replace the Paul Ryan budget with the RSC's budget
This substitute amendment would replace Paul Ryan's budget with the Republican Study Committee's alternative proposal, which would actually balance the federal budget in about a decade. Ryan's budget, while a step in the right direction, would not balance the budget until at least 2040 – far too slowly given the massive size of our nation’s debt.
"Yea" votes scored. - 21: H.Con.Res. 34 - Congressman Paul Ryan's Budget for Fiscal Year 2012✘ Nay
Key Vote 21: H.Con.Res. 34 - Congressman Paul Ryan's Budget for Fiscal Year 2012
This bill is Congressman Paul Ryan’s budget proposal for FY 2012. It would balance the federal budget by 2040 without raising taxes, and would cut $6.2 trillion over the next decade compared to President Obama’s budget. The plan reduces government spending to below 20 percent of GDP and block grants Medicaid to the states.
"Yea" votes scored. - 22: H.R. 1213 - To repeal mandatory funding to the states to establish health care exchanges.✔ Yea
Key Vote 22: H.R. 1213 - To repeal mandatory funding to the states to establish health care exchanges.
The bill would repeal mandatory funding provided to states in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare) to establish American Health Benefit Exchanges. The Obama administration is already using this unlimited slush fund to seduce states into collaborating in the implementation of ObamaCare and has hinted at tapping it to bail out exploding state Medicaid budgets. H.R. 1213 would strike the unlimited direct appropriation and rescind any unobligated funds.
"Yea" votes scored. - 23: H.R. 1229 - Putting the Gulf of Mexico Back to Work Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 23: H.R. 1229 - Putting the Gulf of Mexico Back to Work Act
The bill would amend the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act to facilitate the production of American energy resources from the Gulf of Mexico. The Obama administration has delayed or canceled offshore lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico. The bill would jumpstart offshore oil drilling by implementing a 30-day deadline in which the secretary of the U.S. Interior Department would have to make a decision on the Gulf of Mexico drilling permit applications.
"Yea" votes scored. - 24: On Agreeing: H.Amdt.397 to H.R. 2017 - to reduce spending of the legislation by 10%✘ Nay
Key Vote 24: On Agreeing: H.Amdt.397 to H.R. 2017 - to reduce spending of the legislation by 10%
The amendment to Homeland Security appropriations would cut funding to that department by 10% across the board. This would save over $3.5 billion from current funding levels.
"Yea" votes scored. - 25: H.Amdt. 428 to H.R. 2112 - to cut $700 million dollars in waste to pay off the debt✘ Nay
Key Vote 25: H.Amdt. 428 to H.R. 2112 - to cut $700 million dollars in waste to pay off the debt
This amendment to the “megabus” appropriations bill would reduce funding for the Economic Research Service by $43 million; reduce funding for the National Agriculture Statistical Service by $85 million; reduce funding for the Agriculture research service by $650 million; zero out the Food for Peace program and to apply the savings towards reducing the budget deficit.
"Yea" votes scored. - 26: H.Amdt. 443 to H.R. 2112 - to cut $900 million in waste and apply to a spending reduction account✘ Nay
Key Vote 26: H.Amdt. 443 to H.R. 2112 - to cut $900 million in waste and apply to a spending reduction account
This amendment to the “megabus” appropriations bill would reduce Food for Peace Title II Grants by $940 million and apply the savings towards reducing the budget deficit.
"Yea" votes scored. - 27: H.Amdt.596 to H.R. 2354 -to cut spending 9.93% ($3.04 billion) from Energy & Water Appropriations Act of 2012✘ Nay
Key Vote 27: H.Amdt.596 to H.R. 2354 -to cut spending 9.93% ($3.04 billion) from Energy & Water Appropriations Act of 2012
This amendment to the Energy & Water appropriations bill would cut spending by an additional $3.04 billion – nearly 10% - and apply that total to reducing the budget deficit.
"Yea" votes scored. - 28: H.R. 2560 - Cut, Cap, and Balance Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 28: H.R. 2560 - Cut, Cap, and Balance Act
This is the “Cut, Cap, and Balance Act of 2011”, which would cut total spending for FY2012 by $111 billion, cap total federal spending, and require the passage of a Balanced Budget Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that includes a super-majority requirement to raise taxes and a limit on spending before the debt limit can be raised.
"Yea" votes scored. - 29: H.Amdt. 715 to H.R. 2584 - to cut $3 billion and apply it to the spending reduction account✘ Nay
Key Vote 29: H.Amdt. 715 to H.R. 2584 - to cut $3 billion and apply it to the spending reduction account
This amendment to the Department of Interior appropriations would reduce spending in that department by over $3 billion and apply that money to reducing the budget deficit.
"Yea" votes scored. - 30: S. 365 - The Budget Control Act of 2011✘ Yea
Key Vote 30: S. 365 - The Budget Control Act of 2011
This weak bill, the “Budget Control Act of 2011”, allows President Obama to raise the debt ceiling to over $16 trillion, in exchange for undetermined spending cuts to be decided by a "Super-Committee" picked from both parties. This committee is unlikely to be able to agree to any real spending cuts, and is allowed to use tax increases to create the necessary deficit reductions.
"Nay" votes scored. - 31: H.R. 2587 - Protecting Jobs From Government Interference Act✘ Nay
Key Vote 31: H.R. 2587 - Protecting Jobs From Government Interference Act
The bill would prohibit the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) from ordering any employer to close, relocate or transfer employment under any circumstance. The Protecting Jobs from Government Interference Act would help ensure that the government agency does not over step their bounds by dictating decisions made by private sector companies.
"Yea" votes scored. - 32: On Passage: H.R. 2401 - To require analyses of the cumulative and incremental impacts of certain rules and actions of the EPA✔ Yea
Key Vote 32: On Passage: H.R. 2401 - To require analyses of the cumulative and incremental impacts of certain rules and actions of the EPA
This bill, the TRAIN Act, would establish an 11-member committee, chaired by the Department of Commerce, to analyze the impacts of a number of major Environment Protection Agency (EPA) regulations. This bill would push back against the EPA's unconstitutional, outrageous rules and regulations that raise energy prices for consumers, destroy jobs and increase our dependence on foreign sources of energy.
"Yea" votes scored. - 33: On Concurring to the Senate Amdt.: H.R. 2608 (Continuing Resolution to fund the federal government)✘ Yea
Key Vote 33: On Concurring to the Senate Amdt.: H.R. 2608 (Continuing Resolution to fund the federal government)
This bill was used as the vehicle for the Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the federal government. Because the Senate has refused to pass a budget for three years, the government has been funded through these CR’s, continuing our unsustainable levels of deficit spending without even the transparency of the open budget process.
"Nay" votes scored. - 35: H.R. 3078 - To implement the United States-Columbia Trade Promotion Agreement✘ Nay
Key Vote 35: H.R. 3078 - To implement the United States-Columbia Trade Promotion Agreement
This would ratify the pending free trade agreement with Columbia. Freer trade will allow Americans to reap the benefits of competition, which include more choices, better products, and lower prices.
"Yea" votes scored. - 36: H.R. 3079 - To implement the United States-Panama Trade Promotion Agreement✘ Nay
Key Vote 36: H.R. 3079 - To implement the United States-Panama Trade Promotion Agreement
This would ratify the pending free trade agreement with Panama. Freer trade will allow Americans to reap the benefits of competition, which include more choices, better products, and lower prices.
"Yea" votes scored. - 37: H.R. 3080 - To implement the United States-Korea Trade Agreement✘ Nay
Key Vote 37: H.R. 3080 - To implement the United States-Korea Trade Agreement
This would ratify the pending free trade agreement with South Korea. Freer trade will allow Americans to reap the benefits of competition, which include more choices, better products, and lower prices.
"Yea" votes scored. - 38: H.R. 2832 - To extend the Generalized System of Preferences, and for other purposes✘ Yea
Key Vote 38: H.R. 2832 - To extend the Generalized System of Preferences, and for other purposes
This bill picks favorites among trading partners and disrupts the price system. The biggest problem is that an amendment to extend Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) at the current, higher post-stimulus levels is attached to the bill.
"Nay" votes scored. - 39: H.R. 2250 - EPA Regulatory Relief Act✔ Yea
Key Vote 39: H.R. 2250 - EPA Regulatory Relief Act
The bill would help to curtail the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Boiler MACT regulations on boilers and industrial incinerators. Boiler MACT is an unreasonable regulation that would shut down businesses and cost thousands of jobs.
"Yea" votes scored. - 40: H.R. 10 - Making major executive regulations subject to Congressional vote (REINS Act)✔ Yea
Key Vote 40: H.R. 10 - Making major executive regulations subject to Congressional vote (REINS Act)
This bill, titled the “REINS Act” would require a vote in Congress on any “major” regulations issued by the executive branch before it could be enforced on the American people. The REINS Act would restore accountability and protect citizens’ rights by giving elected officials a voice in all major regulations issued.
"Yea" votes scored. - No votes for this year match the provided filters.
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