Texarkana Gazette

congressio­nal roll call

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HOUSE $15.3 BILLION FOR DISASTER RELIEF:

Voting 316 for and 90 against, the House on Sept. 8 gave final congressio­nal approval to a bill (HR 601) that would appropriat­e $15.3 billion in disaster aid for recovery from hurricanes Harvey and Irma while raising the national debt limit through Dec. 8 and funding the government on a stopgap basis for the same period. Because this is emergency spending not offset elsewhere in the budget, it would be added to federal deficits. The bill locked in a deal between President Trump and congressio­nal Democrats that set a far shorter debt-limit extension than the 18 months sought by Republican leaders. All negative votes were cast by Republican­s.

The bill would provide $350 million for Small Business Administra­tion loans and grants, $7.45 billion for Federal Emergency Management Agency aid to storm victims and $7 billion-plus to fund community-developmen­t block grants for the immediate rebuilding of towns and cities.

Rodney Frelinghuy­sen, R-N.J., called the bill “the first step to what will be a long and difficult recovery” for residents of Texas, Louisiana, Florida and possibly elsewhere.

Richard Neal, D-Mass., said raising the debt ceiling “is not about future spending. This is about the credit card having come due for in most instances reasonable expenditur­es, not the least of which is the obligation we have to Social Security, Medicare and our senior citizens.”

No member spoke against the bill.

A yes vote was to send the bill to President Trump. ARKANSAS

Voting no: Bruce Westerman, R-4 TEXAS

Voting yes: Louie Gohmert, R-1, John Ratcliffe, R-4

HURRICANE HARVEY DISASTER AID:

Voting 419 for and three against, the House on Sept. 6 passed an earlier version of HR 601 (above) that sought to appropriat­e $7.85 billion in Hurricane Harvey disaster relief, including $7.45 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency and

$450 million in Small Business Administra­tion aid for rebuilding areas of Texas and Louisiana devastated by the storm. The entire outlay was to have been deficit spending.

Al Green, D-Texas, said: “This is only a down payment. There must be much more. We need help in Houston post haste as is the case with other places around the country that have been devastated.”

John Culberson, R-Texas, said “help is on the way because today in the Congress, there are no Republican­s, there are no Democrats, we are all Americans.”

No member spoke against the bill. The negative votes were cast by Justin Amash of Michigan, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Andy Biggs of Arizona, all Republican­s.

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

Voting yes: Westerman TEXAS Voting yes: Gohmert, Ratcliffe

RETENTION OF SUBSIDIZED AIR TRAVEL:

Voting 140 for and 280 against, the House on Sept. 6 refused to kill the Essential Air Service program by removing its $150 million budget from a fiscal 2018 appropriat­ions bill (HR 3354) that remained in debate. Under the EAS program, airlines receive taxpayer subsidies to provide two to four round trips daily between about 160 participat­ing communitie­s and hub airports. The program is funded by user fees as well as public funds.

Tom McClintock, R-Calif., said the program “subsidizes empty and near-empty planes to fly from small airports to regional hubs that are usually just a few hours away or less by car. This was supposed to be a temporary program” when enacted in 1978.

Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., said the amendment “would cut off air service to many rural communitie­s and would put economies of many of our small towns potentiall­y at risk.”

A yes vote was to effectivel­y kill the Essential Air Service program. ARKANSAS

Voting no: Westerman TEXAS Voting yes: Gohmert, Ratcliffe

RETENTION OF AMTRAK SUBSIDY:

Voting 128 for and 193 against, the House on Sept. 6 refused to strip a pending appropriat­ions bill (HR 3354, above) of its $1.1 billion subsidy for Amtrak, thus killing the nation’s rail passenger agency by shutting down all 15 of its long-distance routes and all 28 of its state-supported routes. Overall, Amtrak reaches more than 500 communitie­s in 46 states. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., said: “I would submit that there is zero evidence that Amtrak passengers cannot absorb higher fares to pay their own way.”

Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., said the Amtrak account was “carefully scrubbed” and deemed worthy of funding.

A yes vote was to defund Amtrak. ARKANSAS

Voting yes: Westerman TEXAS

Voting yes: Ratcliffe Voting no: Gohmert SENATE

$15.3 BILLION

FOR DISASTER RELIEF:

Voting 80 for and 17 against, the Senate on Sept. 7 approved a bill (HR 601, above) that would appropriat­e $15.3 billion in disaster aid for recovery from hurricanes Harvey and Irma while raising the national debt limit through Dec. 8 and funding the government on a stopgap basis for the same period. The spending would be added to annual deficits rather than offset elsewhere in the budget.

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

Voting yes: Tom Cotton, R, John Boozman, R TEXAS

Voting yes: John Cornyn, R, Ted Cruz, R

‘PAY AS YOU GO’ FOR HURRICANE RELIEF:

Voting 87 for and 10 against, the Senate on Sept. 7 tabled an amendment to HR 601 (above) that sought to keep the bill’s $15.3 billion expenditur­e deficit-neutral by cutting the same amount from foreign assistance accounts.

No senator spoke against the amendment.

A yes vote opposed “pay as you go” for the bill. ARKANSAS

Voting yes: Cotton, Boozman TEXAS

Voting yes: Cornyn Voting no: Cruz KEY VOTES AHEAD

In the week of Sept. 11, the House will take up a bill that would privatize much of the Federal Aviation Administra­tion workforce, while the Senate will debate the 2018 military budget.

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