Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How Arkansas’ congressio­nal delegation voted

Here is how Arkansas’ U.S. senators and U.S. representa­tives voted on major roll call votes during the week that ended Friday.

- — VOTERAMA IN CONGRESS

HOUSE

Two-year budget, debt deal. Passed 266-167, a two-year fiscal deal between Republican­s and Democrats (HR1314) that would suspend the national-debt limit until March 15, 2017, to allow continued Treasury borrowing; raise statutory caps on discretion­ary spending by $80 billion through September 2017; increase emergency (deficit) spending for war and foreign affairs by up to $32 billion through September 2017; avert sharp increases starting Jan. 1 in many senior citizens’ Medicare Part B premiums; and extend the solvency of the Social Security Disability Insurance Trust Fund. These and other spending increases would be offset by steps such as the sale of oil from government reserves, miscellane­ous fee increases and bookkeepin­g changes, as well as by spending cuts in certain areas of Medicare and Social Security, and in farm, student-loan and a variety of other domestic programs. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said: “The president wanted a clean debt-limit increase. [Republican­s] wanted significan­t entitlemen­t reforms. What we are left with is a compromise which lowers the trajectory of our debt, but also assures the world that the United States will pay its bills.” No member spoke against the bill during floor debate. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Rick Crawford (R) French Hill (R) Steve Womack (R) Bruce Westerman (R)

Renewal of Export-Import Bank. Passed 313-118, a bill (HR597) that would renew the Export-Import Bank’s congressio­nal charter after a four-month lapse and reauthoriz­e the agency through fiscal 2019. This would put the bank back in the business of providing taxpayer-backed financing to help foreign customers purchase U.S. products. A day earlier, bank supporters used a discharge petition signed by 218 members from both parties to overcome the opposition of hostile committee chairmen and get the bill to the floor for this vote. Supporters hailed the New Dealera agency as a job-creator, while critics said it distorts free markets by practicing “corporate welfare” and “crony capitalism.” Fewer than 2 percent of the bank’s transactio­ns have gone into default in recent years, and it usually returns a profit to the Treasury even with an exposure of $100 billion-plus in taxpayer liability. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., said bank critics “live in a world where the politics of purity trumps the realism of today. … Here is the reality: In my district, thousands of jobs, millions of dollars of exports and many, many people rely on this to be reauthoriz­ed.” Bill Huizenga, R-Mich., said the bank embodies “the entitlemen­t mentality that has grown up here in the United States. It is sad to me that some believe that this is the only, or the best, way for the U.S. to compete on the world stage when, in fact, we know it is not.” A yes vote was to reauthoriz­e the Export-Import Bank. Crawford (R) Hill (R) Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Fiduciary standards for financial advisers. Passed 245186, a bill to sidetrack a Department of Labor regulation that would impose fiduciary standards on those who sell financial advice to retail investors such as retirees with 401(k) accounts. These standards legally obligate advisers to put their clients’ interests ahead of their own in recommendi­ng financial products. The bill (HR1090) would indefinite­ly delay a soon-to-be-implemente­d rule spawned by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial-regulation law. Now, only some financial advisers and brokers are required by law to follow fiduciary standards when they provide personaliz­ed advice to clients. Ann Wagner, R-Mo., said: “Ninety-eight percent of all IRAs with less than $25,000 are in a brokerage relationsh­ip today. For that reason, this rule will actually hurt the very people that it aims to protect. We must not play politics with their retirement savings.” Robert Scott, D-Va., said the existing standard allows “unscrupulo­us advisers to give conflicted advice and push a financial product from which they will reap a bigger profit even if the product is not in the best interest of their client.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Crawford (R) Hill (R) Womack (R) Westerman (R)

Speaker Paul Ryan. Elected Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., as House speaker, replacing Ohio Republican John A. Boehner, who resigned from Congress. The results were 236 votes for Ryan, 184 for California Democrat Nancy Pelosi, nine for Florida Republican Daniel Webster and one each for Tennessee Democrat Jim Cooper, Georgia Democrat John Lewis and former Secretary of State Colin Powell (the speaker does not have to be a House member). Ryan, 45, has represente­d Wisconsin’s 1st Congressio­nal District since 1999. He was Mitt Romney’s vice presidenti­al running mate in 2012 and served as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee in the current Congress. A yes vote signifies support for Ryan. Crawford (R) Hill (R) Womack (R) Westerman (R)

SENATE

Two-year budget, debt deal. Approved 64-35, a bipartisan fiscal deal (HR1314, above) that would extend federal borrowing authority through March 15, 2017, and set higher spending levels through September 2017. In part, the bill allows the national debt to rise above its current level of $18.2 trillion, increases military and nonmilitar­y discretion­ary spending by $80 billion over two years and raises emergency war spending by up to $32 billion over two years. On its revenue side, the bill uses an array of spending cuts, fee increases, program changes and sales of government assets to offset nearly all of its spending increases. A yes vote was to send the bill to President Barack Obama, who signed it into law. John Boozman (R) Tom Cotton (R)

Cyberattac­ks on America. Passed 74-21, a bill (S754) that would encourage companies struck by cyberattac­ks to voluntaril­y share sensitive data on the incident with federal agencies and other companies without fear of being sued over privacy violations. The objective is to enable the public and private sectors to band together in real time to counter ongoing attacks and prevent similar ones. Companies now resist sharing data with the government because of their need to protect customer privacy. By adhering to steps in the bill, they would receive broad immunity from legal actions. The bill requires scrubbing to erase personal references from submitted data and routes the cleansed data through the Department of Homeland Security to defense and intelligen­ce agencies. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said the bill “is not going to completely end the tidal wave of cyberattac­ks against the government and corporatio­ns, but passing it is better than doing nothing — and that is where Congress has left the matter in recent years.” Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said the bill “does very little to protect cybersecur­ity … and has major problems with respect to protecting the liberty of the American people.” A yes vote was to send the bill to conference with a similar Housepasse­d measure. Boozman (R) Cotton (R)

Freedom of Informatio­n Act. Defeated 37-59, an amendment to fully apply the Freedom of Informatio­n Act to S754 (above). This upheld broad Freedom of Informatio­n Act exemptions that were secretly added to the bill by the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. Enacted in 1967, the act gives citizens the right to seek access to the records of all federal agencies, with certain types of informatio­n protected from disclosure for reasons such as privacy and national security. In addition to curbing public access to federal data about cyberattac­ks, the underlying bill would pre-empt state and local freedom-of-informatio­n laws concerning cybersecur­ity monitoring. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said the Freedom of Informatio­n Act “is the backbone to ensuring an open and accountabl­e government.” Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said the amendment would make the law less effective in countering cyberattac­ks. A yes vote was to remove freedom-of-informatio­n exemptions from the bill. Boozman (R) Cotton (R)

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