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. FOR AGAINST NOT VOTING PASSED DEFEATED

-

HOUSE

Condemning racism against

Asian-Americans. Adopted 243164, a nonbinding Democratic-sponsored measure (HRes908) to condemn expression­s of racism, discrimina­tion or religious intoleranc­e against Asian-Americans related to the covid-19 pandemic, including the use of such terms as “Chinese Virus,” “Wuhan Virus,” and “Kung-flu.” Mark Takano, D-Calif., said the measure would counter “the xenophobic anti-Asian rhetoric that President Trump and his allies have been using to distract us from their woefully inadequate response to covid-19 … fueling racism and inspiring violent attacks on Asian-Americans and Asian immigrants.” Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said: “At the heart of this resolution is an absurd notion that referring to the virus as the Wuhan virus or the China virus is the same as contributi­ng to violence against Asian-Americans, which I will tell you nobody on this side of the aisle supports.”

A yes vote was in support of the resolution.

Rick Crawford (R) French Hill (R)

Steve Womack (R) Bruce Westerman (R)

Filing private lawsuits

against school bias. Passed 232188, a bill (HR2574) that would authorize private individual­s to file “disparate impact” lawsuits under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This legal doctrine comes into play when government policies that appear neutral on the surface have the effect of discrimina­ting against protected groups. Seemingly neutral policies affecting public schools are often alleged to have an unlawful disparate impact on minorities. This bill would override the 2001 Supreme Court ruling in Alexander v. Sandoval that denies private citizens the right to file disparate impact claims against federally funded programs. Bobby Scott, D-Va., said the bill “will restore the right of students and parents to address racial inequities in public schools,” where “discrimina­tion increasing­ly comes in the form of coded terminolog­y, structural inequality and implicit bias rather than explicit bigotry.” Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said: “The creation of a private right of action would lead to additional burdens on already taxed state and local agencies, especially school systems who would have to defend themselves against tenuous allegation­s advanced by parents and activists.”

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

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R)

Westerman (R)

Addressing anti-Semitism

under Title VI. Adopted 255-164, a motion broadening the duties of officials empowered by HR2574 (above) to monitor compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Under the GOP-sponsored motion, these overseers would have to treat anti-Semitism as prohibited discrimina­tion under Title VI, even though the Department of Education and Department of Justice started doing that as early as 2010, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Title VII is the part of the Civil Rights Act focused on religious discrimina­tion. Title VI prohibits discrimina­tion on the basis of race, color or national origin in programs receiving federal assistance. Sponsor Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said that under her measure, “We can ensure that recipients of federal education funding are doing all they can to protect members of our communitie­s from horrific anti-Semitism.”

Bobby Scott, D-Va., called the motion “a political attempt to insert religion into Title VI” and divert attention “from that core idea that people who have been discrimina­ted against ought to be able to get into court.” A yes vote was to adopt the motion. Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Accommodat­ing pregnancy

in the workplace. Passed 329-73, a bill (HR2694) that would require private-sector firms and government agencies with at least 15 employees to provide reasonable accommodat­ions for workers and job applicants who are pregnant or have recently given birth. The bill would not require employers to make accommodat­ions that impose undue hardship on their operations. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., said: “Reasonable accommodat­ions can range from providing seating, water and light duty to excusing pregnant workers from tasks that involve dangerous substances. But when pregnant workers do not have access to the accommodat­ions they need, they are at risk of losing their job, being denied a promotion, or not being hired in the first place.” Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said: “House Republican­s have long supported protection­s in federal law for all workers, but especially pregnant workers,” noting that “there are already important protection­s under federal law to prevent workplace discrimina­tion, including federal laws that rightfully protect pregnant workers.”

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

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Granting exemption based

on religion. Defeated 177-226, a Republican bid to exempt employers from having to make reasonable accommodat­ions under HR2694 (above) in cases where to do so would deprive them of religious freedom protected under the Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said the bill “does not currently include a longstandi­ng provision from the Civil Rights Act that protects religious organizati­ons from being forced to make employment decisions that conflict with their faith,” and therefore it would “create legal risks for religious organizati­ons and their religiousl­y backed employment decisions.”

Bobby Scott, D-Va., said the motion “would jeopardize women’s health and risk their pregnancie­s in order to provide a religious exemption for employers.” He said “the bill does not in any way amend or change the underlying exemptions in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act or Americans with Disabiliti­es Act or any other [law].”

A yes vote was to adopt the GOP motion.

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Promoting integratio­n in

public schools. Passed 248-167, a bill establishi­ng a grant program to promote integratio­n in school districts where opportunit­y is sharply divided along racial and economic lines. The bill (HR2639) would provide a limited number of districts with funding to develop strategies for increasing the diversity of student population­s shaped by de facto segregatio­n. The bill is patterned after a $10-million-per-year Obama administra­tion program, killed by the Trump administra­tion, in which up to 20 school districts received grants to develop pilot programs for increasing racial and economic diversity. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, said: “Racial segregatio­n in public education has been illegal for more than 66 years in the United States. Still, American public schools are more segregated today than at any time since the 1960s. … [Not] because the law requires it. They are segregated by their ZIP Codes.”

Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. called the bill a “mandate that would have the federal government decide how best to address the issues of racial and socioecono­mic isolation in America’s schools. … Creating more government programs that have to scramble for funding in order to operate successful­ly is the last thing we need to foster the best environmen­t for all students to learn.”

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

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Defeating Republican diversity plan. Defeated 171-243, a Republican alternativ­e to HR2639 (above) that proposed open-ended funding in the form of block grants rather than narrowly defined categorica­l grants to increase diversity in kindergart­en-through-12th-grade classrooms.

Sponsor Rick Allen, R-Ga., said his amendment is needed because “Democrats have decided the teachers unions are more important to them than real families who are desperate for access to a better education for their children.” Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, said: “I have no idea what bill [Republican­s] are reading. There is nothing in this bill about teachers unions or anything else that they are talking about.” A yes vote was to adopt the amendment.

Crawford (R)

Hill (R)

Womack (R) Westerman (R)

SENATE

Confirming Judge Valderrama.

Confirmed 68-26, Franklin U. Valderrama, a circuit court judge in Cook County, Ill., as a United States district judge for the Northern District of Illinois. Valderrama was an attorney in private practice before joining the Cook County bench in 2007, and he has taught pre-trial civil litigation at the University of Illinois-Chicago John Marshall Law School.

A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

John Boozman (R)

Tom Cotton (R)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States