Albuquerque Journal

HOW YOUR CONGRESSIO­NAL DELEGATES VOTED

- By Voterama In Congress © 2018 Thomas Reports Inc.

For the week ending October 7

Contact your legislator­s at the U.S. Capitol ZIP codes: House 20515, Senate 20510 Capitol operator: (202) 224-3121

WASHINGTON — Here’s how area senators voted on major issues during the legislativ­e week ending Oct. 6. The House was in recess.

CONFIRMING JUSTICE BRETT KAVANAUGH: Voting 50 for and 48 against, the Senate on Oct. 6 confirmed Judge Brett Kavanaugh, 53, of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, as an associate justice of the Supreme Court. Joe Manchin of West Virginia was the only Democrat voting for Kavanaugh, and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska was the only Republican present in the chamber who did not vote for him. Murkowski voted no when the roll was called, then withdrew that vote as a courtesy to Montana Republican Steve Daines, a Kavanaugh backer who was absent from Washington due to his daughter`s wedding. The “pairing” between Murkowski and Daines had no effect on the outcome of the confirmati­on vote. Murkowski was officially recorded as “present” for the roll call.

A yes vote was to confirm Kavanaugh.

NO: Tom Udall, D, Martin Heinrich, D

BRETT KAVANAUGH NOMINATION: Voting 51 for and 49 against, the Senate on Oct. 5 agreed to a motion that would invoke cloture, or limit debate, on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh, 53, of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, as an associate justice on the Supreme Court. This advanced the nomination to a final vote that was likely to occur the next day following up to 30 hours of additional debate.

A yes vote was to advance the Kavanaugh nomination.

NO: Udall, Heinrich

PROGRAMS TO COMBAT OPIOIDS ADDICTION: Voting 98 for and one against, the Senate on Oct. 3 gave final congressio­nal approval to a package of 70 bills that would authorize $500 million over three years for state and local programs to fight the growing national addiction to illicit drugs including opioids. The bill would require the postal service to develop technology for detecting substances including fentanyl in packages from abroad just as private carriers must do. In addition, the bill would increase the number of recovery facilities for drug addicts; allow up to 30 days of Medicaid coverage of opioids addicts age 21 to 64 who are inpatients in mental institutio­ns; expand government and private research into non- addictive pain therapies; allow Medicaid reimbursem­ent for treating infants born with addictions and expand telemedici­ne access in rural areas. The dissenting vote was cast by Mike Lee, R-Utah.

A yes vote was to send HR 6 to President Trump.

YES: Udall, Heinrich

AVIATION PROGRAMS, DISASTER AID, FEMA: Voting 93 for and six against, the Senate on Oct. 3 gave final congressio­nal approval to a bill (HR 302) that would budget $90 billion for aviation programs, including airport improvemen­ts over five years while reauthoriz­ing the Federal Emergency Management Agency through September 2023 and requiring it to allocate a larger share of its resources to mitigating damage from disasters. The bill would also authorize $1.68 billion in relief to victims of Hurricane Florence and western wildfires this year. In addition, the bill empowers security agencies including the FBI to shoot down drones deemed a “credible threat” to individual­s or federal facilities; requires airlines to grant attendants 10 hours of rest between flights, up from eight at present; sets minimum dimensions for passenger seats; prohibits the bumping of passengers already on board; bars the use of cellphones for in-flight calls; subsidizes passenger service to smaller cities and upgrades in-fight accommodat­ions for handicappe­d passengers.

A yes vote was to send the bill to President Trump.

YES: Udall, Heinrich

 ??  ?? SENATE Martin Heinrich (D) Tom Udall (D)
SENATE Martin Heinrich (D) Tom Udall (D)

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