Northwest 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

Unmasking shell corporatio­ns. Passed 249-173, a bill (HR2513) that would require small corporatio­ns and limited liability companies to identify their true owners when they are formed and in annual filings with the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network, which combats domestic and global criminal activity, including the laundering of terrorism and drug funds. Because anonymousl­y financed shell corporatio­ns tend to be relatively small operations, the bill is directed mainly at U.S.based companies with fewer than 20 full-time employees and annual sales or gross receipts under $5 million. The bill exempts banks, credit unions, registered broker-dealers, insurance companies, nonprofits and certain publicly traded companies. Companies would have to identify their “beneficial owners” — those who ultimately control the firm even though ownership is listed in another name. Critics said the bill would imperil business owners’ privacy rights because law enforcemen­t could access the Treasury Department database without court-issued warrants or subpoenas.

Maxine Waters, D-Calif., said: “Today, anyone can create a company without providing any informatio­n about the company’s actual owners. This ability to remain anonymous gives criminals and terrorists unimpeded, hidden access to our banking and commercial systems.”

Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., said the bill would require small-business owners “to submit their personal informatio­n to a new federal database … accessible to law enforcemen­t without a warrant and without a subpoena, a disturbing violation of due process.”

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

✖ Rick Crawford (R)

✖ French Hill (R)

✖ Steve Womack (R)

✖ Bruce Westerman (R)

Requiring subpoenas to access database. Defeated 197224, a Republican-sponsored motion requiring law enforcemen­t to obtain a court-issued subpoena for access to ownership informatio­n collected by the Treasury Department under HR2513 (above).

The informatio­n consists of the “beneficial,” or actual, owner’s name, address, date of birth and driver’s license or other government ID number. Law enforcemen­t could tap into the Treasury database only as part of an ongoing investigat­ion, and a civil liberties unit would oversee their actions.

Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, said the motion “is about defending freedom. Civil liberties have historical­ly united this great body. Do any of my colleagues, regardless of party affiliatio­n, really want law enforcemen­t to access the data of small-business owners and farmers without cause and without a warrant or subpoena?”

Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., said: “I am thrilled to hear my Republican colleagues say they are concerned about privacy and civil liberties. But this bill already has extraordin­arily strong privacy protection­s. Law enforcemen­t can only ask for access for this data if there is already an ongoing law enforcemen­t investigat­ion. The whole process is overseen by civil liberties and privacy officers.” A yes vote was to adopt the motion.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

Combating foreign interferen­ce in U.S. elections.

Passed 227-181, a bill (HR4617) that would require U.S. political campaigns to inform law enforcemen­t when they receive offers of foreign assistance; close provisions that allow foreign funds to illegally enter the U.S. electoral system; prohibit foreign spending on state ballot initiative­s; prohibit U.S. campaigns from disclosing non-public informatio­n, including poll numbers to foreign government­s and their agents; and require sponsors of online political advertisin­g to identify themselves in the ad, just as they must do in commercial­s run on broadcast channels.

Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., said “the need to act is urgent” because “our adversarie­s have a variety of tools to interfere in our democracy. Their goal is to divide us and attack our values of equality and freedom. Their tactics are calculated to undermine confidence in our democratic institutio­ns so that they will collapse under the pressure of the division and distrust.” Rodney Davis, R-Ill., said parts of the bill “are unconstitu­tional and will have a chilling effect on our freedom of speech. For instance, we should not be proposing broad, vague regulation­s for disclosing online political ads that create unworkable standards for the American public.”

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

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Protecting state and local elections. Defeated 180-231, an amendment that sought to remove from HR4617 (above) a provision authorizin­g the U.S. attorney general to correct the spread of false logistical informatio­n about state and local elections — including misstateme­nts of voting dates, times and places — if non-federal authoritie­s have failed to do so. Sponsor Debbie Lesko, R-Ariz., said her amendment is needed because the bill “turns the United States attorney general into a fact-checker” and is “a federal intrusion into state and local elections.”

Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., said: “I don’t believe this is an example of federal interferen­ce or overreach. It is an example of putting to use all levels of government to protect voters in our democracy.”

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

Attempting to censure

Adam Schiff. Blocked 218-185, a Republican-sponsored resolution (HRes630) “condemning and censuring” Rep. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, which is conducting an inquiry into impeachmen­t of President Donald Trump. The GOP measure faulted Schiff, D-Calif., for publicly mischaract­erizing a July 2019 telephone conversati­on between Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ukraine; for Schiff’s acknowledg­ed misleading statements about his staff’s contacts with a whistleblo­wer who alleged that Trump acted inappropri­ately in that conversati­on; and for accusing Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign of working with Russia.

The resolution was quashed by a parliament­ary ruling that it did not qualify as a “privileged question” entitled to floor action under House rules. On the vote reported here, Democrats upheld that ruling after it was appealed by Republican­s. House rules did not allow debate on the measure. A yes vote was in opposition to the censure of Schiff.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

SENATE

Reinforcin­g cap on state and local tax deductions. Rejected 43-52, a Democratic attempt to allow states to offer residents a way to circumvent the $10,000 limit on deductions of state and local income and property taxes on federal returns. Republican­s included the cap in their 2017 tax-cut law, a move seen as targeting upper-income areas that tend to levy high taxes and vote Democratic. To allow their taxpayers to stay within the $10,000 limit without seeing their overall tax bills jump, New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t have allowed residents to make federally deductible charitable contributi­ons to public-improvemen­t funds, and then receive credits against their state tax obligation­s as a trade-off. But the Internal Revenue Service issued a regulation to prohibit the tactic, extending the general rule that taxpayers cannot deduct charitable contributi­ons for which they receive something in return. On the vote reported here, the Senate defeated a resolution (SJRes50) aimed at killing the IRS rule.

Robert Menendez, D-N.J., said the new IRS rules are “designed to block efforts by homeowners across America to avoid the Trump tax law’s harmful caps on their state and local tax deductions. … Because of the new $10,000 cap on property tax deductions, home values in New Jersey have taken a huge hit. In fact, home values in Essex County, N.J., declined more than those of any other county in America.” Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said: “Charity is by definition something done out of the goodness of your heart without expecting or getting something in return. That is certainly not the case with these work-arounds. There is no charity involved. In fact, once taking into account both the state tax credit and the charitable deduction at the federal level, a taxpayer could actually receive a tax benefit that exceeds the dollar value of their so-called donation.”

A yes vote was to adopt the resolution.

✖ John Boozman (R)

✖ Tom Cotton (R)

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