Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Congressio­nal roll call HOUSE SENATE

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Here’s how area members of Congress voted on major issues during the week ending Jan. 19.

GOVERNMENT FUNDING: Voting 230-197, the House on Jan. 18 passed a GOP-drafted bill (HR 195) that would fund agencies from Jan. 20 through Feb. 16 while renewing the Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years. The measure was intended to avert a partial government shutdown at midnight the next day. It was the fourth stopgap bill offered by the Republican majority after having failed to garner enough votes to pass a regular budget for the fiscal year that began on Oct. 1, 2017. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

John Faso, R-Kinderhook:

Yes

Sean Maloney, D-Cold Spring: No TRUMP IMPEACHMEN­T: Voting 355-66 against, the House on Jan. 19 tabled (killed) a resolution (H Res 705) calling for the impeachmen­t of President Trump based on “high misdemeano­rs” primarily involving the president’s inflammato­ry and defamatory Twitter postings and public and private statements. The measure was sponsored by Al Green, D-Texas, under a House rule that entitles any member, on two days’ notice, to offer a “privileged resolution” from the floor within broad limits on subject matter. A yes vote was in opposition to considerat­ion of the impeachmen­t measure. Faso: Yes

Maloney: Yes POST-ABORTION PENALTIES: Voting 241-183, the House on Jan. 19 passed a GOP-drafted bill (HR 4712) that restates a 2002 law intended to protect fetuses that survive an attempted abortion. The bill adds criminal penalties for doctors and nurses who fail to provide postaborti­on medical treatment defined by Congress. Existing law makes it a federal crime for any health practition­er to fail to provide adequate care to a fetus that is alive outside the womb following an attempted abortion. The law defines a fetus in those circumstan­ces as a person with full legal protection­s regardless of their stage of developmen­t. The current bill, the BornAlive Survivors Protection Act, requires surviving fetuses to be immediatel­y transporte­d to a hospital and makes doctors and nurses subject to prison terms if they fail to do so. It would shield the mother from prosecutio­n. According to the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Research Service, “born alive” means a fetus which after removal from the mother “breathes or has a beating heart, pulsation of the umbilical cord, or definite movement of voluntary muscles, regardless of whether the umbilical cord has been cut.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Faso: Yes

Maloney: No

WORLD BANK: Voting 237184, the House on Jan. 17 passed a bill (HR 3326) that would slash U.S. support of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n unless it changes its criteria for delivering economic aid to impoverish­ed nations. A World Bank agency, the IDA provides grants and loans to the world’s 77 poorest countries with population­s totaling 450 million. The bill authorizes a $3.65 billion U.S. payment to the bank over three years. But it would withhold up to 30 percent of the outlay until the Treasury Department certifies reforms are underway, including an emphasis on quality over quantity in the disburseme­nt of funds. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Faso: Yes

Maloney: Yes

SPENDING BILL: Voting 50-49, the Senate on Jan. 19 failed to reach the 60 votes it needed to advance a House-passed bill that would fund agencies from

Jan. 20 through Feb. 16 and extend the Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years. This led to a partial government shutdown that began about two hours later, at midnight. A yes vote was to advance what was the fourth stopgap spending bill (HR 195) for the budget year that began Oct. 1, 2017.

Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y.:

No Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.: No

WARRANTLES­S SURVEIL

LANCE: Voting 65-34, the Senate on Jan. 18 gave final congressio­nal approval to a six-year extension (S 139) of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act (FISA). The post-Sept. 11 law is a key government tool for detecting and preventing foreign-based terrorist activity, but also a target of criticism that it imperils the privacy rights of innocent Americans. The law gives agencies including the National Security Agency and FBI warrantles­s access to commercial databases of foreigners’ voice and digital communicat­ions — phone calls, emails, online chats, text messaging and social-media postings — that pass through wireless and landline facilities in the United States. If agencies use the databases to target Americans suspected of terrorist connection­s, they must obtain FISA court warrants based on probable cause. When the government inadverten­tly sweeps up innocent Americans’ communicat­ions, the informatio­n must be expunged or disregarde­d, although the law lacks a means for outsiders to see if that has occurred. A yes vote was to send the bill to President Trump. Gillibrand: No Schumer: Yes

COMING UP

The House was scheduled to be in recess until Jan. 29, while the Senate’s agenda was to be announced.

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