Albuquerque Journal

HOW YOUR CONGRESSIO­NAL DELEGATES VOTED

- By Voterama In Congress

For the week ending October 25

Contact your legislator­s at the U.S. Capitol Zip codes: House 20515, Senate 20510 Capitol operator: (202) 224-3121 © 2020 Thomas Reports Inc.

SCALING BACK ANTI-POVERTY INVESTMENT­S BY BANKS: Voting 43 for and 48 against, the Senate on Oct. 19 cleared the way for a Trump administra­tion regulatory rollback that would allow banks to skirt anti-poverty objectives of the 1977 Community Reinvestme­nt Act (CRA). A civil rights law, the CRA gives banks incentives to issue loans for economic developmen­t and affordable housing in low- and moderate-income communitie­s where they have branches. In part, the rollback would allow banks to comply with the law by meeting broad criteria rather than specific social and economic obligation­s in poor communitie­s. On this vote, the Senate turned back a Democratic-sponsored measure ( HJ Res 90) to block the new rule, which has not yet taken effect.

A yes vote opposed a weakening of the Community Reinvestme­nt Act.

YES: Tom Udall, D, Martin Heinrich, D

BLOCKING GOP CORONAVIRU­S PACKAGE: Voting 51 for and 44 against, the Senate on Oct. 21 failed to reach 60 votes needed to advance a Republican-sponsored $500 billion coronaviru­s-relief package (S 178). The measure included funds to expand unemployme­nt benefits, extend the Paycheck Protection Program for businesses, build protective features at K-12 schools, expand COVID-19 testing, advance vaccine developmen­t and take other steps to deal with the pandemic. Democrats called the bill small-bore compared to a $2.2 trillion measure recently passed by the House, noting that it omitted benefits including $1,200 stimulus payments to individual­s, aid for renters and homeowners, expanded child tax credits and funding for postal operations, election security and the 2020 Census.

A yes vote was to advance the Republican bill.

NO: Udall, Heinrich

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States