Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How Arkansas’ congressio­nal delegation voted

- — VOTERAMA IN CONGRESS

Here is how Arkansas’ U.S. senators and U.S. representa­tives voted on major roll call votes during the week that ended Friday.

HOUSE

New rules for allocating green cards. Passed 365-65, a bill (HR1044) that would change how “green cards” granting permanent legal status are allocated by U.S. Citizen and Immigratio­n Services to people living in the United States on temporary, employment-based H1-B visas. Those visas are used primarily to attract highly skilled, well-educated foreigners to the U.S. workforce for periods generally ranging from three to six years, after which they are usually required to leave the country if they have not received a green card. The bill would remove per-country caps on the number of employment-based green cards issued each year, and instead award them first-come, first-served. The current caps prohibit natives of any country from receiving more than 7% of the annual number of permanent, employment-based visas. That disadvanta­ges workers from populous countries supplying large numbers of H1-B recipients. Those from smaller countries do not wait nearly as long.

Ken Buck, R-Colo., said imposing per-country caps “doesn’t make sense. Our employment-based immigratio­n system has a single purpose, bringing in the best and brightest. We shouldn’t hamstring our economy by placing artificial caps on who can get a green card quicker based solely on where you are born.”

Doug Collins, R-Ga., said he supports much of the bill, but because it was not subjected to committee hearings to fix what he sees as flaws, it “is not ready for prime time.”

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

✔ Rick Crawford (R)

✔ French Hill (R)

✔ Steve Womack (R)

✔ Bruce Westerman (R)

Inventory of U.S. bases overseas. Approved 219-210, requiring the Department of Defense to provide Congress with an inventory of U.S. military installati­ons on foreign territory along with the cost of operating each one and an explanatio­n of how it serves national security. The amendment was added to the fiscal 2020 military policy bill (HR2500). The department reportedly owns several hundred permanent bases and short-term military facilities abroad, and the first-ever audit of Pentagon operations, released last November, was unable to locate many of them. Amendment sponsor Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., said: “The American people deserve to know what their tax dollars are being spent on and not take it on blind faith that every dollar that is given to the Pentagon is a dollar that is protecting their safety.” Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., said Congress already has access to budget documents showing “in exhaustive detail … thousands of line items on where the Pentagon spending is going right now — domestic, foreign, everything.”

A yes vote was to require an inventory of U.S. military holdings abroad.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Presidenti­al contracts with federal agencies. Approved 243186, amending HR2500 (above) to prohibit presidents, vice presidents and Cabinet members from holding contracts with the U.S. government, just as members of Congress are barred by federal law from doing. The rationale of the ban is that high federal officials, as insiders, could exert undue influence over the terms of the contract. The expanded ban presumably would prohibit any attempted renewal of the government’s contract for leasing the Old Post Office on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue in Washington to the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel, which generates profits for the Trump Organizati­on and therefore the president. Adam Smith, D-Wash., called this “a good amendment that will improve the ethics of our government.”

Jody Hice, R-Ga., said the amendment is “nothing other than, once again, an attack on President Trump and his family.”

A yes vote was to bar top executive-branch officials, including presidents, from holding federal contracts.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Protecting federal personnel agency. Adopted 247-182, an amendment to HR2500 (above) that would scuttle a Trump administra­tion proposal to downgrade the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) by merging it with the General Services Administra­tion. With 5,500 employees, the Office of Personnel Management administer­s programs ranging from health insurance to retirement accounts for millions of active and retired federal civilian workers and their families. The General Services Administra­tion, with a staff of 12,000, is in charge of managing federal office space, transporta­tion, communicat­ions and procuremen­t, among other duties.

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

9/11 victims’ compensati­on fund. Passed 402-12, a bipartisan bill that would reauthoriz­e the September 11th Victim Compensati­on Fund through fiscal 2090. Administer­ed by a special master, the fund pays economic and noneconomi­c damages to 9/11 first responders and their survivors as well as to individual­s with health problems as a result of participat­ing in 9/11 cleanup efforts, and to their survivors. In addition, the bill would allow claims to be filed until October 2089, remove a cap on noneconomi­c damages in certain circumstan­ces and index for inflation the program’s annual limits on compensati­on for economic losses. The bill promptly replenishe­s the fund to avert threatened cuts of up to 70% in pending and future claims, and makes whole claims already paid at reduced levels. Although the bill is projected to cost $10.2 billion in its first 10 years, and countless billions after that as cancers and other latent diseases emerge, it does not yet include a “pay for” mechanism or long-term funding means.

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

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

$733 billion for military in 2020. Approved 220-197, authorizin­g a $733 billion military budget (HR2500) for fiscal 2020, including $69 billion for combat operations and more than $57 billion for active-duty and retiree health care. The bill sets a 3.1% pay raise for uniformed personnel; addresses climate change as a national-security threat; advances the closure of the Guantanamo Bay military prison; requires Pentagon strategies for countering Russian interferen­ce in the 2020 U.S. elections; lifts an administra­tion ban on transgende­r military service; prohibits U.S. troop reductions in South Korea below 28,000; funds programs for military victims of sexual assault and approves tens of billions for convention­al and nuclear weapons while defunding the developmen­t of low-yield nuclear weapons.

In addition, the bill requires what would be the first congressio­nal authorizat­ion for the U.S. war against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) forces in the Middle East. At the same time, it would effectivel­y repeal the 2001 Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force, which, along with the Iraq war resolution approved in 2002, has been the legal basis of U.S. military actions since 9/11.

The bill also would establish 12 weeks of paid family and medical leave for the federal workforce to accommodat­e circumstan­ces including childbirth, adoptions, foster care and serious illness. The leave is now available without pay to civil servants under the 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act. In addition, the bill allows military personnel who are victims of sexual assaults to receive emergency contracept­ion at base clinics, and eliminates co-pays for contracept­ive services provided by the Department of Defense health care system.

The bill also would bar funding for space-based missile defenses; prohibit the diversion of military funds to wall constructi­on on the southwest border; halt the sale of F-35 aircraft to Turkey unless it cancels its purchase of an air defense system from Russia; require the Marine Corps to admit women to basic training; fund repair of earthquake damages to military bases in southern California; require more accurate and transparen­t reporting of U.S.-caused civilian casualties; and provide $250 million in security assistance to Ukraine.

A yes vote was to send the bill to a House-Senate conference committee.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Developing low-yield nuclear weapons. Defeated 201221, a Republican amendment to HR2500 (above) that sought to fund an administra­tion plan to start mounting low-yield nuclear weapons — W76-2 warheads — on submarine-launched Trident ballistic missiles. Military planners say low-yield, or tactical, warheads are for use in limited conflicts, in contrast to strategic nuclear weapons, which are designed to destroy targets far from the immediate battlefiel­d. Advocates say the United States needs to counter Russia’s extensive low-yield arsenal, while critics say the weapons heighten the risk of Armageddon because it is folly to think nuclear war can be waged on a limited basis. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, called it “unilateral nuclear disarmamen­t” to not deploy low-yield nuclear weapons. Adam Smith, D-Wash., called the weapon “a mistake” because “it takes us down the road of saying we can have a manageable nuclear war.”

A yes vote was to add low-yield nuclear weapons to the U.S. arsenal.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

Budget increase for combat readiness, pay raise. Defeated 204-212, a Republican motion that sought to add nearly $3 billion to HR2500 (above) for purposes such as expanding combat accounts and increasing the bill’s pay raise for uniformed personnel from the 3.1% level requested by President Donald Trump to 4%.

Jim Banks, R-Ind., said: “Let us give our troops the raise they earned.”

Adam Smith, D-Wash., said the bill already funds “the largest pay raise for our troops in 10 years.” A yes vote was to adopt the motion.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

SENATE

John Pallasch, assistant labor secretary. Confirmed 54-39, John P. Pallasch, the head of Kentucky’s employment and training agency, as an assistant secretary in the Department of Labor. He will lead the Employment and Training Administra­tion, which consumes nearly two-thirds of the department’s budget while administer­ing workplace programs for 22 million Americans. Pallasch was head of the Mine Safety and Health Administra­tion in the George W. Bush administra­tion.

A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

✔ John Boozman (R)

✔ Tom Cotton (R)

Robert King, assistant secretary of education. Confirmed 56-37, Robert L. King, the president of the Kentucky Council on Postsecond­ary Education, as assistant secretary of postsecond­ary education. He served previously as head of the Arizona Community Foundation and chancellor of the State University of New York system of higher education, and he was an aide to former New York Gov. George Pataki.

A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

✔ Boozman (R)

✔ Cotton (R)

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