Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How Arkansas’ congressio­nal delegation voted

Here is how Arkansas’ U.S. senators and U.S. representa­tives voted on major roll call votes during the week that ended Friday. D F KEY: h✔ FOR h✖ AGAINST h NOT VOTING PASSED DEFEATED

-

HOUSE Eligibilit­y for health-care

tax credits. Passed 238-184, a bill (HR2581) that would require people applying for premium tax credits under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act to submit their Social Security numbers to document their citizenshi­p or legal status. However, the bill rules out as verificati­on the IRS-issued Individual Taxpayer Identifica­tion Number that aliens who lack Social Security numbers use to file federal tax returns. The bill would replace a two-step Affordable Care Act verificati­on process that allows a 90-day grace period so that when a person’s documentat­ion is uncertain, his coverage can begin immediatel­y, with any erroneous tax credits to be recouped. Directed mainly at foreigners, the bill also would apply to the GOP’s proposed American Health Care Act if that measure becomes law. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, said the bill “simply says that we are not going to pay first and chase later, which always is a losing approach for taxpayers. Not a dollar of taxpayer money should go out the door until citizenshi­p or legal status is verified, period.”

Judy Chu, D-Calif., said the bill would “create barriers for immigrants who are here legally” and for “U.S. citizens who have complicati­ons with their Social Security numbers. This includes people who recently change their name after marriage, have an error in their records, were born abroad or were victims of human traffickin­g.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Rick Crawford (R) French Hill (R)

Steve Womack (R) Bruce Westerman (R)

Immediate health insurance for infants. Rejected 193231, a Democratic bid to ensure immediate health care coverage under HR2581 (above) for newborns and infants up to 1 year old whose legal status cannot be promptly establishe­d because of the time it takes to obtain a Social Security number for meeting the bill’s verificati­on requiremen­t. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., called the GOP bill “an unnecessar­y barrier for newborns to receive the care they need. God forbid if your child needs extra care after they are born but doesn’t have coverage because your plan is waiting to verify your child’s status. A child’s life should not hang in the balance because of paperwork and red tape.”

Kevin Brady, R-Texas, said: “Ninety-six percent of children receive their Social Security numbers within two weeks after they are born in a hospital, and many of them have parents who are eligible for these [tax] credits as well, so it is immediate care. [And] they can achieve and receive health care immediatel­y” while paperwork is being processed.

A yes vote was to adopt the Democratic motion. Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

SENATE Economic sanctions on

Iran. Passed 98-2, a bill (SB722) that would impose U.S. economic sanctions on foreign individual­s and entities that provide support to Iran’s ballistic-missile program, which is separate from its now-dormant nuclear-arms program. The bill also would sanction Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard over its terrorist activities and the Mahan Air commercial airline that is thought to transport terrorists and weapons in the Middle East. The sanctions would consist of steps such as denying certain individual­s’ entry to the U.S. and freezing violators’ assets in U.S.-based financial institutio­ns.

Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., said that when the U.S. signed the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, “We made it clear that we will continue to hold Iran accountabl­e for its nefarious activities outside of the four corners of the agreement. We must hold Iran accountabl­e for missile tests, for financing terrorism and human rights violations.” No senator spoke against the bill. A yes vote was to send the bill to the House.

John Boozman (R)

Tom Cotton (R)

Economic sanctions on

Russia. Approved 97-2, amending SB722 (above) to require congressio­nal review of attempts by any president to ease or remove U.S. economic sanctions on Russia. In addition, the amendment would place a range of new sanctions on the Russian economy while putting into law several Obamaera executive orders that penalize the Kremlin for its interventi­ons in the U.S. and other countries. Both the new and existing penalties are responses, in part, to Russia’s cyberwarfa­re against U.S. elections, aggression in Ukraine and support of the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The measure would apply to Russian economic sectors such as mining, metals, shipping and railways; address corruption and human rights abuses in Russia; impose financial penalties on non-Russian entities and individual­s that provide the Kremlin with certain types of commercial support; and penalize entities that supply weapons to the Syrian regime.

Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, said the measure “sends an unambiguou­s message that the United States will not accept Russia’s continued aggression, will adopt tough measures to both punish its past actions and deter future aggression against our country and our allies.” No senator spoke against the amendment.

A yes vote was to expand U.S. economic sanctions on Russia. Boozman (R)

Cotton (R)

Arms to Saudi Arabia.

Defeated 47-53, a measure (SJRes42) to block the administra­tion’s plan to sell Saudi Arabia $500 million in laser-guided bombs and related weaponry for its war against Iranian-backed forces in Yemen. The package is part of a proposed $110 billion U.S. weapons sale to the Saudis. Backers argue that the transactio­n will help contain Iran’s expansion in the Middle East, while critics say it would further entangle America in Yemen’s civil war and humanitari­an crisis.

Rand Paul. R-Ky., said: “What has Saudi Arabia done over the last 30 years? They have been the No. 1 exporter of jihadist philosophy … of let’s hate America, let’s hate the Judeo-Christian ethic. … They teach it in the schools in Indonesia. They corrupt the religion of Islam throughout the world, and we are going to give them weapons? I think it is a huge, huge mistake.” John McCain, R-Ariz., said: “If we vote down this arms sale to Saudi Arabia, it would have a devastatin­g effect on our standing in the Middle East and a long-term impact on our ability to counter what is clearly Iranian aggressive behavior.”

A yes vote was to block the $500 million arms sale. Boozman (R)

Cotton (R)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States