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.

- VOTERAMA IN CONGRESS

HOUSE

Approving $2.2 trillion to confront coronaviru­s. Approved on a nonrecord vote, a $2.2 trillion rescue package (HR748) to cushion the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic on U.S. workers, families, businesses and medical caregivers. In part, the bill would provide:

1. One-time nontaxable payments, delivered by mail or direct-deposit, of $1,200 to individual­s with annual incomes up to $75,000 and $2,400 to couples earning up to $150,000, plus $500 per child. Gradually reduced payments would be made to individual­s earning between $75,000 and $99,000 and couples in the $150,000-to-$198,000 range. Higher earners are excluded from the benefit.

2. $250 billion to finance four months’ of expanded unemployme­nt insurance, under which people losing jobs because of the virus would receive $600 per week on top of their state’s base level of jobless pay. The $600 payments would be made available to gig economy workers, independen­t contractor­s, the self-employed and others ineligible for regular unemployme­nt benefits in their states. 3. $350 billion in low- or no-interest loans through June 30 to enable businesses with fewer than 500 employees to meet payroll and certain overhead costs including rent. The loans would be totally forgiven for companies agreeing to not lay off workers and rehire those already dismissed during the pandemic. So that the money is quickly infused into the economy, banks would conduct the lending and receive Treasury reimbursem­ent of their expenditur­es.

4. Loans bearing no more than 2% interest to companies with 500 to 10,000 employees that agree not to send jobs overseas; the first six months would be interest-free, and repayment schedules would be delayed for six months.

5. $150 billion to help state and local government­s cover the cost of fighting the pandemic, with $8 billion allocated to tribal government­s.

6. $130 billion to help hospitals, community health centers and nursing homes procure supplies and equipment, and boost staffing levels, plus $1 billion for the Indian Health Service.

7. $50 billion for Department of Agricultur­e loan programs to benefit farmers and ranchers.

8. $17 billion to companies including Boeing deemed vital to national security.

Supporter Kevin Brady, R-Texas, said: “For the larger and most distressed businesses, we provide loans knowing [their] survival is crucial to millions of American workers. These loans aren’t bailouts. They’re given with oversight and repayment to companies who did nothing wrong but suffered collateral damage as a result of this virus.”

Opponent Ken Buck, R-Colo., said “we are facing an unpreceden­ted emergency, one tied directly to China’s nefarious actions. However, as President Trump said, we cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself. We believe that the fight against the virus will take six-to-eight weeks, yet this bill spends money decades into the future.”

The House voted as a chamber to send the bill to the White House.

SENATE

Marshaling $2.2 trillion against coronaviru­s. Passed 960, a bill (H 748) that would marshal $2.2 trillion in coming months against the nationwide spread of the coronaviru­s. In addition to provisions

described above, the bill would authorize $400 billion for loans and grants to large corporatio­ns, cities and states.

To receive the full benefit of these payments, companies could not reduce staffs by more than 10%, weaken union contracts or use the money to boost executive compensati­on or finance stock buybacks or dividend payments. For loans, these restrictio­ns would be in force until the repayment date plus one year. The government would collateral­ize loans by obtaining equity shares in recipient companies. About $60 billion of the fund would go to the airline industry, with at least $25 billion used to pay salaries and protect hundreds of thousands of jobs in the air-passenger sector from planes to airports. The Treasury Department, and by extension the White House, would choose recipients and be required to identify the winning companies to Congress within seven days and the public within 14 days, with contract terms revealed. The program would be overseen by a Treasury inspector general and a congressio­nally appointed five-person review board.

Companies controlled by President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, Cabinet members or members of Congress — or the children, spouses or in-laws of those officials — are ineligible to benefit from the $400 billion rescue fund and other payments in the bill. A yes vote was to send the bill to the House.

✔ John Boozman (R)

✔ Tom Cotton (R)

Declining to trim jobless benefits. Defeated 48-48, a GOP-sponsored amendment to HR748 (above) that sought to prohibit laid-off workers from temporaril­y receiving unemployme­nt payments in excess of their salaries. The bill would allow jobless individual­s to receive, over four months, $600 per week on top of their state’s standard benefit. In states with relatively high benefits, the add-on could result in individual­s receiving total payments over four months a few thousand dollars higher than their likely salaries over the same period.

Rick Scott, R-Fla., said unemployme­nt insurance is “the best and quickest way to get money to people who need it most. But we should not create a system where benefits are higher than their salary. We cannot pay people more to not work than to work.” Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said: “When less than half of the people in America have $400 in their savings, the notion that we might end up giving people another $1,000 or $2,000 at the end of four months, to me, is not something we ought to be ashamed of or run away from.”

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

✔ Boozman (R)

✔ Cotton (R)

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