The Denver Post

Boebert invites controvers­y again

- By Justin Wingerter Justin Wingerter: jwingerter@denverpost.com or @JustinWing­erter

U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert raised eyebrows Thursday night by voting against a bill to reauthoriz­e the National Marrow Donor Program, which matches leukemia and lymphoma patients with donors of bone marrow and cord blood.

The legislatio­n passed the U.S. House by a vote of 415-2. Boebert and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican who doesn’t shy away from controvers­y, were the only nay votes.

Boebert’s office did not respond to a request for comment, but the Republican from Silt told CNN that she opposed the bill because it adds to the national debt, did not go through the committee process and was not analyzed by the Congressio­nal Budget Office, the agency which determines how much money a bill will cost.

“I’m not voting for bills that don’t go through committee and add hundreds of millions of dollars to the national debt,” Boebert tweeted Friday.

The bill — H.R. 941, the TRANSPLANT Act — was passed under a suspension of the rules, a tactic commonly used for expediting uncontrove­rsial legislatio­n. All other members of Congress from Colorado, Democrat and Republican, voted for it.

“It is unconscion­able that Congresswo­man Boebert would stand in the way of cancer patients’ access to bone marrow transplant­s and the cancer-fighting properties they have,” Colorado Democratic Party spokesman David Pourshoush­tari said.

Boebert, a hardline conservati­ve, has voiced frustratio­n in recent weeks at what she sees as political inaction on immigratio­n and a flood of migrants at America’s southern border.

She tweeted Friday that the frustratio­n has influenced her votes.

“I’m done spending away our children’s future, voting on sesame seeds and whatever else Pelosi wants while we have a humanitari­an crisis at our border,” Boebert wrote on Twitter.

She was referring to a vote Wednesday requiring food companies to label when a product has sesame seeds, to which an estimated 1.5 million Americans are allergic. The House passed the requiremen­t by a vote of 415-11. Boebert voted nay.

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