The Morning Call (Sunday)

VOTES IN THE U.S. HOUSE

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HJ Res 17: REMOVING ERA DEADLINE

Voting 222 for and 204 against, the House on Wednesday adopted a resolution that would remove June 30, 1982, as the deadline for states to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. When Congress sent the ERA to the states in 1972, it set a 1979 deadline that it later moved to 1982. As many as 38 states have voted for ratificati­on. But five rescinded their approval and Virginia’s ratificati­on last year is undercut by a Department of Justice ruling that the 1982 deadline must be obeyed. The ERA states: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” A yes vote was to send the resolution to the Senate.

Yes: Brian Fitzpatric­k, R-1st (Bucks, parts of Montgomery and Philadelph­ia); Madeleine Dean, D-4th (Montgomery, parts of Berks); Susan Wild, D-7th (Lehigh, Northampto­n, parts of Monroe); Matt Cartwright, D-8th (most of Monroe)

No: Dan Meuser, R-9th (Schuylkill, parts of Carbon and Berks)

HR 1620: RENEWING VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT

Voting 244 for and 172 against, the House on Wednesday approved a five-year extension of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act, which uses federal grants and laws to reduce crimes directed primarily at women. In part, the bill would prohibit persons convicted of domestic abuse, misdemeano­r stalking or dating violence from possessing firearms; ensure that those losing work because of domestic violence qualify for unemployme­nt benefits; require shelters to admit transgende­r individual­s in their acquired sex; strengthen tribal jurisdicti­on over outsiders charged with committing crimes on reservatio­ns; improve the care of children exposed to domestic violence; expand rape prevention and education programs; and step up efforts to address sexual violence on campuses. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Yes: Fitzpatric­k, Dean, Wild, Cartwright

No: Meuser

HR 6: PROTECTING DREAMERS, OTHER IMMIGRANTS

Voting 228 for and 197 against, the House on Thursday passed a bill that would grant permanent legal status and a path to citizenshi­p to as many as 2.1 million “dreamers” who were brought illegally to the United States as children and face potential deportatio­n. The bill would grant relief to dreamers who were younger than 18 when they entered the United States and meet other qualificat­ions. In addition, the bill would provide the same deportatio­n protection and citizenshi­p path to hundreds of thousands of aliens now the United States under a humanitari­an program known as Temporary Protected Status. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Yes: Fitzpatric­k, Dean, Wild, Cartwright

No: Meuser

PROHIBITIN­G ALIEN GANG MEMBERS

Voting 203 for and 216 against, the House on Thursday defeated a Republican motion that sought to prevent members of criminal gangs from using a law designed to protect dreamers (HR 6, above) as a subterfuge for acquiring legal status. Democrats said the bill already has safeguards to prohibit undocument­ed aliens who are a threat to national security, including gang members, from obtaining green cards and path to citizenshi­p. A yes vote was to adopt the motion.

Yes: Fitzpatric­k, Meuser

No: Dean, Wild, Cartwright

HR 1603: OVERHAULIN­G FARM-WORKER VISAS

Voting 247 for and 174 against, the House on Thursday passed a bill that would overhaul the H-2A visa program, which admits undocument­ed migrants for temporary U.S. agricultur­al jobs the domestic workforce is unable or unwilling to fill. Over time, the bill could enable hundreds of thousands of these workers to apply for legal residency for themselves, spouses and minor children. In addition to meeting labor shortages, the bill would establish a mandatory federal E-Verify system by which agricultur­al employers could determine workers’ immigratio­n status. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Yes: Fitzpatric­k, Dean, Wild, Cartwright

No: Meuser

HR 1085: APPROVING MEDALS FOR CAPITOL POLICE

Voting 413 for and 12 against, the House on Wednesday awarded three Congressio­nal Gold Medals in honor of U.S. Capitol and District of Columbia police who defended the Capitol against an armed insurrecti­on on January 6. Those voting against the bill were Republican­s Andy Biggs of Arizona; Matt Gaetz and Greg Steube of Florida; Marjorie Taylor Greene and Andrew Clyde of Georgia; Thomas Massie of Kentucky; Andy Harris of Maryland; John Rose of Tennessee; Bob Good of Virginia; and Louie Gohmert, Michael Cloud and Lance Gooden of Texas. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

Yes: Fitzpatric­k, Dean, Wild, Cartwright, Meuser

Haaland, 60, is the first Native American appointed to a Cabinet position, and in 2018, she and Sharice Davids, D-Kan., became the first Native American women elected to Congress. A member of the Laguna Pueblo Nation, she identifies herself as a 35th-generation New Mexican. A yes vote was to confirm the nominee. Yes: Bob Casey

Not voting: Pat Toomey, R CONFIRMING XAVIER BECERRA AS HEALTH SECRETARY

Voting 50 for and 49 against, the Senate on Thursday confirmed Xavier Becerra, the attorney general of California, as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, the first Latino to hold that position. Becerra, 62, was a Democratic congressma­n from California between 1993-2018. A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

Yes: Casey

No: Toomey

CONFIRMING ISABEL GUZMAN AS SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRA­TOR

Voting 81 for and 17 against, the Senate on Tuesday confirmed Isabel C. Guzman, 49, as administra­tor of the Small Business Administra­tion. She was a top official at the SBA during the Obama administra­tion and worked most recently as director of the Office of the Small Business Advocate in California. A yes vote was to confirm the nominee.

Yes: Toomey, Casey

— Thomas Voting Reports

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Debra Haaland, D- N.M., testifies during her confirmati­on hearing to be interior secretary at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24 in Washington, D.C.
AP FILE PHOTO Debra Haaland, D- N.M., testifies during her confirmati­on hearing to be interior secretary at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24 in Washington, D.C.

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