Northwest 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.

Storage of nuclear waste. Passed 340-72 a bill (HR3053) that would revive a long-dormant federal plan to permanentl­y store in an undergroun­d repository at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain the tens of thousands of metric tons of radioactiv­e waste from active and retired nuclear power plants in 39 states and federal weapons sites in at least six states. Authorized in 1987, the partially built, exhaustive­ly studied facility 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas has not received final approvals from Congress or agencies including the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Energy. The bill would expedite congressio­nal and regulatory steps necessary for the facility to start receiving shipments for burial in its subterrane­an tunnels and caverns. The measure would also direct the Energy Department to establish at least one interim facility, at a location or locations to be determined, that would receive nuclear waste for temporary storage until the permanent repository opens. Truck and rail shipments of radioactiv­e material from nearly 130 locations would pass through more than 300 congressio­nal districts to reach the interim and permanent storage facilities. Paul Tonko, D-N.Y., said: “I know we will hear about the challenges of transporti­ng spent fuel to a final repository, but the reality is nuclear material is already moved around our country today without incident due to strict safety requiremen­ts. The only alternativ­e to not moving this waste is keeping it spread out in 121 locations for tens of thousands of years.” Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., said: “We are talking about shipping up to three loads of radioactiv­e waste per week to Nevada by rail or truck for over 50 years. Dangerous waste would go through 329 congressio­nal districts across this country. To the members representi­ng these districts … are you prepared to face your constituen­ts at home and tell them that you voted to put their safety at risk?” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Rick Crawford (R) French Hill (R)

Steve Womack (R) Bruce Westerman (R)

Local veto over waste

storage. Defeated 80-332, an amendment to HR3053 (above) that sought to require the federal government to obtain approvals from an array of local and tribal jurisdicti­ons and the Nevada governor before it could designate Yucca Mountain as the nation’s permanent repository for tens of thousands of metric tons of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactiv­e waste.

Dina Titus, D-Nev., said: “This is not just about the safety of Nevada. This is about doing what is right, finding a policy that will work that is based on consent that has a chance to get out of the Senate and really move us [toward] a real solution to an issue that does affect the entire nation.”

John Shimkus, R-Ill., said the amendment was so broadly worded that “a community in the state of Utah, Minersvill­e, population 887, 300 miles from the site, could be able to veto this national solution to a national problem that they are going to have more power than the federal government” over locating the repository.

A yes vote was to adopt an amendment requiring broadbased local consent to the siting decision.

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Discrimina­tion in auto

lending. Passed 234-175, a measure to repeal a 5-year-old action by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau against car and truck loans that charge higher interest rates to minority-group borrowers than to other similarly qualified borrowers. Backers of the repeal measure (SJRes57) said the bureau is prohibited by the 2010 Dodd-Frank law from regulating auto dealership­s. But the bureau asserts authority under the 1974 Equal Credit Opportunit­y Act to combat discrimina­tion in auto credit issued by third-party lenders. That law prohibits creditors from discrimina­ting based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status or age. Under third-party lending, finance companies originate loans that dealers arrange for their customers, with dealers marking up the interest rate and taking a share of the proceeds. Next to home mortgages and student loans, auto loans are the largest source of household debt in the United States.

Although the consumer bureau did not issue a formal rule on auto lending, critics say the 2013 guidance is essentiall­y the same as a regulation and therefore subject to repeal under the Congressio­nal Review Act. This would greatly expand the scope of the review act, which to date has been used only to nullify actual regulation­s within 60 working days of their effective date.

Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y., said: “Today’s fight over this important resolution may sound like a wonky policy debate, but to my constituen­ts, permanentl­y repealing this flawed ruling may make the difference between being denied or approved for an auto loan they desperatel­y need.”

Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said the repeal “would have the effect of encouragin­g discrimina­tion against minority borrowers in the auto lending market and discouragi­ng the consumer bureau from cracking down on this horrible practice.”

A yes vote was to send the repeal measure to President Donald Trump.

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R) Limiting antitrust enforcemen­t. Passed 230-185, a GOP-drafted bill (HR5645) that would strip the Federal Trade Commission of its 104-year-old authority to use in-house administra­tive judges for determinin­g whether proposed corporate mergers and acquisitio­ns would violate antitrust laws. The FTC and Department of Justice have historical­ly exercised dual authority over “trust busting” laws designed to prevent business monopolies and preserve market competitio­n. This bill would direct the FTC to pursue antitrust enforcemen­t only in federal courts, thus disbanding or neutering the agency’s administra­tive tribunals. The bill was backed by business groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which often see the Department of Justice as easier to deal with on antitrust matters. The measure was opposed by groups including Consumers Union on grounds it would weaken FTC defenses against monopolist­ic business practices.

Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., said that with federal agencies exercising antitrust oversight on dual tracks, “companies may and often do have different experience­s” in seeking approval of mergers and acquisitio­ns. “[This bill] will ensure that companies no longer will be subjected to fundamenta­lly different processes and standards based on the flip of a coin.” Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., said: “The importance of robust antitrust enforcemen­t is not simply a question of preventing higher prices for consumers. In the absence of competitio­n, employers have the power to suppress the wages and mobility of American workers through anti-competitiv­e contractin­g practices, such as noncompete clauses and no-poach agreements.”

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

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Drug costs, corporate

mergers. Defeated 193-220, a Democratic motion that sought to prohibit a pending antitrust enforcemen­t bill (HR5645, above) from applying to proposed corporate mergers and acquisitio­ns that would lead to unreasonab­le increases in prescripti­on-drug prices.

Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, said the motion reduces “the possibilit­y that, through further mergers of drug companies, we will see the sick and dying extorted even more than they are today with skyrocketi­ng prices that are made even worse when these mergers occur.” Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., called the motion “simply a dilatory tactic used by my friends on the other side of the aisle to hold up this important legislatio­n.”

A yes vote was to adopt a motion concerning rising drug prices. Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

SENATE

Michael Brennan, federal

appeals judge. Confirmed 49-46, Michael B. Brennan, 54, a lawyer in private practice and former Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge, for a lifetime appointmen­t on the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which oversees federal trial courts in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana. Supporters said Brennan was highly recommende­d by an American Bar Associatio­n panel on judicial nominees, while critics took issue with his conservati­ve public stands on issues including mass incarcerat­ion, gender equity in the workplace and women’s reproducti­ve rights

Democrats criticized Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for scheduling the vote even though Brennan failed to receive approval from a bipartisan Wisconsin commission for vetting judicial nominees, or from Wisconsin’s junior senator, Democrat Tammy Baldwin. The other Wisconsin senator, Republican Ron Johnson, supported Brennan. Democrats said McConnell flaunted the Senate’s “blue slip” tradition of requiring both senators to approve of judicial nominees from their state.

McConnell said Brennan received “bipartisan support from the people who know him best, including the endorsemen­t of more than 30 current and former peers in Wisconsin. It is not too surprising, then, that the American Bar Associatio­n has awarded Mr. Brennan its highest rating.” Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said Brennan “supports criminal sentencing policies that slap low-level offenders with long jail sentences and exacerbate the problem of mass incarcerat­ion in America. And it gets worse. Mr. Brennan believes that it is A-OK for judges to refuse to follow binding court precedent when the judge just thinks it is incorrect. Now, that is extreme.”

A yes vote was to confirm Brennan.

John Boozman (R)

Tom Cotton (R)

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