Albuquerque Journal

HOW YOUR CONGRESSIO­NAL DELEGATES VOTED ADVANCING PLAN FOR BUDGET RECONCILIA­TION:

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For the week ending February 5

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

By Voterama In Congress © 2021 Thomas Reports Inc.

REMOVING CONGRESSWO­MAN FROM COMMITTEES: Voting 230 for and 198 against, the House on Feb. 4 took away the committee assignment­s of Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., in response to her false, shocking and violent public comments and Facebook postings in recent years, including endorsemen­t of calls for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to be shot and former President Barack Obama and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton to be lynched. Greene has claimed no airplane struck the Pentagon on 9/11, the Clintons were behind the plane crash that killed John F. Kennedy, Jr., that the Sandy Hook and Parkland school shootings never occurred and a Jewish-guided laser beam from space caused California wildfires. She aligned herself as recently as July with the conspiracy cult QAnon. The first-term lawmaker from Georgia’s 14th District had been assigned to two panels: Budget, and Education and Labor. This vote to adopt H Res 72 left her with no committee seats.

A yes vote was to strip Greene of her committee assignment­s.

YES: Deb Haaland, D-1, Teresa Leger Fernandez, D-3

NO: Yvette Herrell, R-2

ADVANCING PLAN FOR BUDGET RECONCILIA­TION: Voting 218 for and 212 against, the House on Feb. 3 adopted a fiscal 2021 budget resolution (H Con Res 11) that would allow President Biden’s $1.9 trillion package of COVID-19 relief measures to pass the Senate on a simple majority vote in coming weeks. The resolution triggers the “budget reconcilia­tion” process that protects specified measures from filibuster­s. Reconcilia­tion is used to expedite complex legislatio­n that affects spending and revenue levels and the national debt. Reconcilia­tion can be used once per fiscal year. The current fiscal year began last Oct. 1, and another budget resolution for fiscal 2022 is due this spring.

A yes vote was to adopt the budget resolution.

YES: Haaland, Leger Fernandez

NO: Herrell

Voting 51 for and 50 against, the Senate on Feb. 5 adopted a fiscal 2021 budget resolution (S Con Res 5) under which President Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s-relief bill could be passed by simple majority vote in coming weeks. Vice President Kamala Harris cast the tie-breaking vote. The resolution triggers the “budget reconcilia­tion” process that protects specified measures from filibuster­s.

A yes vote was to advance the administra­tion’s pandemic-relief legislatio­n.

YES: Ben Ray Luján, D, Martin Heinrich, D

CONFIRMING ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS FOR HOMELAND SECURITY: Voting 56 for and 43 against, the Senate on Feb. 2 confirmed Alejandro N. Mayorkas, 61, as secretary of homeland security. The son of a holocaust survivor and native of Cuba, he is the first Latino and immigrant to hold the position. Mayorkas was deputy DHS secretary and director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services under former President Barack Obama.

A yes vote was to confirm Mayorkas.

YES: Luján, Heinrich

CONFIRMING PETE BUTTIGIEG AS TRANSPORTA­TION SECRETARY: Voting 86 for and 13 against, the Senate on Feb. 2 approved the nomination of Pete Buttigieg, 39, as secretary of transporta­tion, making him the first openly gay person to be confirmed to a Cabinet post in U.S. history. The former mayor of South Bend, Ind., was a Democratic presidenti­al candidate in 2020.

A yes vote was to confirm Buttigieg.

YES: Luján, Heinrich

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