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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KEY: ✔ FOR ✖ AGAINST ☐ NOT VOTING ⇧ PASSED ⇩ DEFEATEDHO­USE

The House was in recess.

SENATE

⇧ Repairing national parks, funding public land. Passed 7325 House Resolution 1957 that would authorize $9.5 billion over five years for repairing facilities at the National Park Service, other federal land agencies and Indian Education Service schools. In addition, the bill would permanentl­y require an annual budget of at least $900 million for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, which provides federal and nonfederal agencies with revenue for acquiring undevelope­d land for conservati­on and recreation­al purposes.

All funding in the bill would come from royalties from oil and gas drilling operations on federal property.

The bill would set aside about $6.5 billion over five years for long-neglected repairs at scores of national parks and related properties, generating tens of thousands of private-sector jobs and halving the Park Service’s $12.5 billion backlog of unfunded maintenanc­e.

Steve Daines, R-Mont., said: “Today, for the first time ever in the U.S. Senate, we will vote to make funding for a critical conservati­on program, the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, full and mandatory. This funding will protect the program and provide certainty for our land managers, for conservati­onists, for sports men and women.”

Bill Cassidy, R-La., said that the bill wrongly excludes coastal storm-mitigation projects from the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund. He said that “because sea levels are rising,” residents of coastal states “are increasing­ly exposed to flooding” and “will be increasing­ly in danger.”

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

✔ John Boozman (R)

✔ Tom Cotton (R)

⇧ Waiving rule on deficit spending. Approved 68-30 allowing HR1957 (above) to move forward as a deficit-spending measure. The bill is projected to add at least $17 billion to the national debt over 10 years, according to Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo. On this vote, the Senate waived a pay-asyou-go budget requiremen­t that increases in mandatory-spending programs must be offset by tax increases or mandatory-spending cuts elsewhere in the budget.

Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., who supported the waiver, said: “I can’t ask for a better tax policy or fiscal policy than to use [oil and gas royalties] to preserve open space and public land and generate revenue and help all of us enjoy the outdoors.” Enzi, an opponent of the waiver, said: “During this fiscal year, we have already run up a deficit of $1.9 trillion — more than twice the size of the deficit we ran at the same time last year. We also just added $2.4 trillion to our debt as the nation necessaril­y responded to the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

A yes vote was to exempt the bill from a “deficit neutral” budget rule.

✔ Boozman (R)

✔ Cotton (R)

⇧ Confirming Justin Walker as appellate judge. Confirmed 51-42 Justin Walker, 38, to serve on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, which is regarded as the second most important U.S. court because it has jurisdicti­on over federal agencies and the regulation­s they issue. Walker’s judicial experience consists of nine months’ service as a federal district judge in Kentucky. He is a former faculty member at the University of Louisville Law School and protege of Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and his resume also includes clerkships for former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy and then Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. appellate court.

McConnell, R-Ky., said Walker has “demonstrat­ed an impressive grasp of legal precedent. At his current post as district judge for the Western District of Kentucky, he eloquently applied this understand­ing to uphold Americans’ religious liberty, and he earned the approval of the American Bar Associatio­n with a rating of well-qualified.”

Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said: “I would like McConnell to go home and tell the citizens of Kentucky why he nominated someone who wants to repeal our health care law when the covid crisis is hurting people there as it is everywhere else. In the middle of a national health care crisis, the Republican Senate majority is poised to confirm a judge who opposes [the Affordable Care Act].

A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

✔ Boozman (R)

✔ Cotton (R)

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