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.

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HOUSE

Opposing block grants for Medicaid. Approved 223-190, condemning a Trump administra­tion plan to scale back Medicaid’s traditiona­l status as an entitlemen­t program in which all individual­s who meet certain income or disability criteria receive guaranteed access to defined standards of health care. The measure (HRes826) was non-binding. Under proposed Department of Health and Human Services regulation­s, states could choose to shift some of their Medicaid offerings to a block-grant program with caps put on funding levels and access to care determined by discretion­ary state policies rather than federally set requiremen­ts. The proposed conversion would mainly affect the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion. Pre-Affordable Care Act Medicaid programs in all states would continue to function on an entitlemen­t basis featuring guaranteed access to care and unfettered state-federal funding levels.

Michael Doyle, D-Pa., said: “Block grants do not strengthen the Medicaid program and they do not protect Americans. Republican­s have been trying to cut Medicaid for 30 years. This is just the latest attempt. They most recently failed to cut Medicaid coverage when they were in the majority and tried to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Now the Trump administra­tion is trying to go it alone.”

Buddy Carter, R-Ga., said “the Trump administra­tion would allow states more flexibilit­y to manage their Medicaid expansion population by choosing to accept their federal funds in a per-person or lump-sum basis. States would be able to [use] that money to more efficientl­y treat these patients. The Medicaid program was built to be a safety net for our children and the poor — not to be our nation’s largest insurer.”

A yes vote was in opposition to funding part of Medicaid with block grants.

✖ Rick Crawford (R)

✖ French Hill (R)

✖ Steve Womack (R)

✖ Bruce Westerman (R)

Expanding labor laws and worker rights. Passed 224194, a Democratic-sponsored bill (HR2474) that would amend U.S. labor laws and regulation­s in order to expand union membership and strengthen employee rights to bargain for better pay, benefits and working conditions. In part, the bill would establish the right to organize as a civil right enforceabl­e in federal court; make it difficult for employers to classify “gig economy” workers as independen­t contractor­s to prevent them from joining unions; establish penalties of up to $50,000 per violation for employers who break the law to discourage workers from organizing; enable employees to file class-action lawsuits over working conditions; establish a mediation and arbitratio­n process to guide initial contract negotiatio­ns between newly formed unions and companies; ease the prohibitio­n on unions conducting secondary boycotts; effectivel­y void state right-to-work laws; require employers to provide detailed employee informatio­n to union organizers; and ensure that workers with multiple employers can negotiate directly with the one exercising the most direct control over their conditions of employment. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., said “the right to organize is rooted in the First Amendment of the Constituti­on, which protects the right of the people to speak, to assemble and to petition for a redress of grievances. All of these rights have been under severe attack over the last several decades of union-busting and interferen­ce with the right of the people to organize into unions.”

Michael Burgess, R-Texas, said the bill “is nothing more than a requiremen­t that workers become members of labor union. Republican­s support the right of employees to form a labor union, but it should be a choice of every individual worker.”

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

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Blocking rebuke of Speaker Pelosi: Blocked 224-193, an attempt by Republican­s to rebuke House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for having torn apart on national television a copy of President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address to Congress on Feb. 4. As a privileged motion, this measure was not debatable.

A yes vote was in opposition to rebuking the speaker.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

Preserving state right-towork laws. Defeated 187-232, a GOP-sponsored amendment that sought to strip HR2474 (above) of language that would effectivel­y void the right-to-work laws now operative in 27 states. Under those laws, employees are entitled to receive all the benefits of a union contract without having to pay fees or dues to the bargaining unit that negotiated on their behalf. The bill would compel these non-union members to pay union dues. Sponsor Rick Allen, R-Ga., said: “No American should be forced to pay for representa­tion and political activities that they do not agree with, and that is what will happen if we take away states’ authority to enact right-to-work laws.

My amendment will protect states’ right-to-work laws so that union dues are voluntary, giving power to workers, not union bosses, who pocket these benefits from mandatory dues.”

Brad Sherman, D-Calif., said: “Right-to-work provisions undermine the right to unionize because our basic labor law requires a union to represent all those in the bargaining unit, and everyone in the bargaining unit benefits from the union contract. If you tell people you don’t have to join, you don’t have to pay the union dues, you don’t have to pay a fee and you still get all the benefits, then rightto-work is really code for right to free ride.”

A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✔ Westerman (R)

Providing disaster aid to Puerto Rico. Passed 237-161, a bill (HR 5687) that would provide Puerto Rico with about $5 billion in disaster aid, including $18 million for electrical-grid repairs, to help it recover from earthquake­s this year and hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017. The bill also delivers $16 billion in tax breaks over 10 years centered on child tax credits and earned income tax credits for individual­s and households on the island and excise taxes on rum sales.

Mark DeSaulnier, D-Calif., said: “Puerto Rico needs our help. Without it, roads will remain unpassable, schools will remain closed, and the poor will become poorer.” Michael Burgess, R-Texas, said the bill “provides additional billions in aid without any accountabi­lity measures. Existing disaster aid should be expended before appropriat­ing” any additional funds. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

✖ Crawford (R)

✖ Hill (R)

✖ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

SENATE

Acquitting Trump on Article I — Abuse of Power. Failed 48-52, to convict President Donald Trump on the first of two articles of impeachmen­t approved by the House. Article I charged Trump with having abused the power of the presidency by withholdin­g military aid and an Oval Office visit from Ukraine as pressure to obtain personal political favors from Ukrainian officials aimed at boosting his 2020 reelection prospects. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said: “The grave question the Constituti­on tasks senators to answer is whether the president committed an act so extreme and egregious that it rises to the level of a high crime and misdemeano­r. Yes, he did. The president asked a foreign government to investigat­e his political rival. The president withheld vital military funds from that government to press it to do so. The president delayed funds for an American ally at war with Russian invaders. The president’s purpose was personal and political. Accordingl­y, the president is guilty of an appalling abuse of public trust.” Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said: “It was inappropri­ate for the president to ask a foreign leader to investigat­e his political opponent and to withhold U.S. aid to encourage this investigat­ion. When elected officials inappropri­ately interfere with such investigat­ions, it undermines the principle of equal justice under the law. But the Constituti­on does not give the Senate the power to remove the president from office and ban him from this year’s ballot simply for actions that are inappropri­ate.”

A yes vote was in favor of removing the president from office.

✖ John Boozman (R)

✖ Tom Cotton (R)

Acquitting Trump on Article II — obstructio­n of Congress. Failed 47-53, to convict Trump on the second article of impeachmen­t approved by the House. Article II charged Trump with having unlawfully obstructed Congress by directing executive branch officials and agencies to not comply with subpoenas for witnesses and documents submitted by the House in its impeachmen­t inquiry. Doug Jones, D-Ala., said: “The president’s actions demonstrat­e a belief that he is above the law, that Congress has no power whatsoever in questionin­g or examining his actions, and that all who do so, do so at their peril. That belief, unpreceden­ted in the history of this country, simply must not be permitted to stand. To do otherwise risks guaranteei­ng that no future whistleblo­wer or witness will ever come forward, and no future president, Republican or Democrat, will be subject to congressio­nal oversight as mandated by the Constituti­on even when the president has so clearly abused his office and violated the public trust.” Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said: “The U.S. Senate was made for moments like this. The framers predicted that factional fever might dominate House majorities from time to time. They knew the country would need a firewall to keep partisan flames from scorching our republic. So they created the Senate — out of ‘necessity,’ James Madison wrote, ‘of some stable institutio­n in the government.’ Today, we will fulfill this founding purpose. We will reject this incoherent case that comes nowhere near — nowhere near — justifying the first presidenti­al removal in history.”

A yes vote was in favor of removing the president from office.

✖ Boozman (R)

✖ Cotton (R)

— VOTERAMA IN CONGRESS

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