Albuquerque Journal

HOW YOUR CONGRESSIO­NAL DELEGATES VOTED

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For the week ending May 15

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

By Voterama In Congress

© 2020 Thomas Reports Inc.

CONDUCTING HOUSE BUSINESS BY REMOTE VOTING: Voting 217 for and 189 against, the House on May 15 changed its rules to allow members to vote remotely in floor proceeding­s for the first time in the 231-year history of the institutio­n. The measure (H Res 965) also permits House committees to conduct committee business by remote connection­s including video links. A response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the rules would be up for renewal in 45 days. For voting on the House floor, each physically present member would be authorized to vote by proxy for up to 10 absent colleagues whose voting instructio­ns, filed electronic­ally with the clerk’s office, he or she would be obligated to follow.

A yes vote was to adopt the resolution.

YES: Deb Haaland, D-1, Xochitl Torres Small, D-2, Ben Ray Luján, D-3

APPROVING $3 TRILLION FOR CORONAVIRU­S RELIEF: Voting 208 for and 199 against, the House on May 15 approved a $3 trillion coronaviru­s relief package (HR 6800) that includes nearly $1 trillion for state, local, tribal and territoria­l government­s; $200 billion to fund hazard pay for essential workers including medical personnel and first responders; $100 billion for hospitals serving poor communitie­s; $100 billion to help tenants pay rent; $75 billion in homeowner mortgage aid; $75 billion for testing for all and free coronaviru­s care for those without health insurance; $25 billion to sustain the Postal Service; $10 billion in disaster aid to businesses and non-profits shut out of the Paycheck Protection Program; $3.6 billion to boost ballot security and voter participat­ion in this year’s elections; $600 million to help local police department­s meet payroll and equipment costs; $600 million to address virus spread in state and federal prisons, and unspecifie­d sums to cover $600 per week in enhanced unemployme­nt benefits through January and a second round of stimulus payments of $1,200 to individual­s and $2,400 to families up to certain income levels plus expanded child tax credits.

In addition, the bill would expand food stamps and nutritiona­l assistance; fund student-loan forgivenes­s of up to $10,000 per borrower; open the Affordable Care Act to coronaviru­s victims lacking health insurance; expand so-called COBRA temporary medical insurance to those losing coverage at work; require the Occupation­al Health and Safety Administra­tion to invoke coronaviru­s workplace rules within seven days; delay Census Bureau deadlines for supplying apportionm­ent and redistrict­ing data to jurisdicti­ons; provide tax credits to incentiviz­e employers to retain workers; expand earned-income tax credits for low-income families; temporaril­y lift a cap on tax deductions for state and local tax payments in certain states and shore up multi-employer pension plans in collective bargaining agreements.

A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

YES: Haaland, Lujan

NO: Torres Small

REJECTING GOP CHANGE TO STIMULUS ID: Voting 198 for and 209 against, the House on May 15 defeated a Republican motion to strip HR 6800 (above) of a provision that would broaden ID requiremen­ts for receiving coronaviru­s stimulus checks. The disputed provision is intended to benefit, among others, those who do not have a Social Security number and do not file a federal tax return because of low income. It allows them to use an IRS Taxpayer Identifica­tion Number to obtain a stimulus check to which they are entitled by law. The first stimulus round of $1,200 for individual­s and $2,400 for families up to certain income levels was approved by Congress in late March, and the second round is funded in the current bill (HR 6800).

A yes vote was to adopt the GOP motion.

NO: Haaland, Torres Small, Luján

RENEWING DOMESTIC SURVEILLAN­CE AUTHORITY: Voting 80 for and 16 against, the Senate on May 14 approved a five-year extension (HR 6172) of three sections of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act (FISA) that require periodic congressio­nal renewal because of their direct clash with Americans’ civil liberties. One section allows law enforcemen­t to place roving wiretaps on homegrown or foreign terrorist suspects moving about the United States, and another authorizes government surveillan­ce on U.S. soil of foreign “lone wolf” suspects not linked to terrorist organizati­ons. Under the third section, the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court can authorize forever-secret FBI searches of domestic library, bookstore and business records if the agency shows “reasonable grounds” the targeted informatio­n is vital to an ongoing domestic probe of specifical­ly defined foreign-sponsored threats to national security. This authority is rooted in Section 215 of FISA, a law enacted in 1978 and expanded after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, to strengthen government powers to detect and prevent terrorist threats to America.

In part, this bill prohibits the use of Section 215 to obtain GPS and cellphone locations; requires most informatio­n obtained in Section 215 searches to be destroyed after five years; requires the attorney general to approve in writing FISA warrants issued against elected officials or candidates; expands Civil Liberties Oversight Board powers to monitor abuses in the discharge of the FISA law; restricts the National Security Agency’s already-scaled-back collection of meta data on telecommun­ications passing through U.S. switching points; and requires the government to disclose within 180 days all substantiv­e opinions by the FISA court.

A yes vote was to send the bill back to the House.

NO: Tom Udall, D, Martin Heinrich, D

EXPANDING CIVIL LIBERTIES SAFEGUARDS: Voting 77 for and 19 against, the Senate on May 13 amended HR 6172 (above) to expand civil liberties’ protection­s for religious institutio­ns, public officials, news organizati­ons and other parties targeted or innocently swept up in probes conducted under Section 215 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act (FISA). The amendment would give judges in the secret FISA courts more authority to order independen­t “amicus curiae’ legal reviews by outside counsel of government actions in such cases.

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

YES: Udall, Heinrich

REQUIRING WARRANTS FOR BROWSER SEARCHES: Voting 59 for and 37 against, the Senate on May 13 rejected an amendment to HR 6172 (above) that sought to prohibit federal investigat­ors from conducting warrantles­s searches of Internet browser and search-engine histories under Section 215 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act. Supporters needed 60 votes to gain approval of their amendment.

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

YES: Udall, Heinrich

 ??  ?? Deb Haaland (D) Ben Ray Luján (D) Xochitl Torres Small (D)
Deb Haaland (D) Ben Ray Luján (D) Xochitl Torres Small (D)
 ??  ?? SENATE Martin Heinrich (D) Tom Udall (D)
SENATE Martin Heinrich (D) Tom Udall (D)

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