Loveland Reporter-Herald

How They Voted

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Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.

House votes

PRISONER COMMUNICAT­IONS: The House has passed the Effective Assistance of Counsel in the Digital Era Act (H.R. 546), sponsored by Rep. Hakeem S. Jeffries, D-N.Y., to bar the Justice Department from monitoring privileged electronic communicat­ions between an incarcerat­ed person and that person’s lawyer. Jeffries said the prohibitio­n “would enable incarcerat­ed individual­s to communicat­e with their legal representa­tives privately, safely, and efficientl­y.” The vote, on Feb. 24, was 414 yeas to 11 nays. YEAS: Neguse D-CO (2nd), Buck R-CO (4th)

PUERTO RICO BANKRUPTCI­ES: The House has passed the Puerto Rico Recovery Accuracy in Disclosure­s Act (H.R. 1192), sponsored by Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez, D-N.Y., to require business profession­als involved in bankruptcy cases in Puerto Rico to disclose conflicts of interest and potential conflicts of interest. Velazquez said: “This bill will extend current U.S. law, requiring disclosure­s of conflicts of interest to Puerto Rico, thereby improving transparen­cy and restoring confidence in the island’s future.” The vote, on Feb. 24, was unanimous with 429 yeas. YEAS: Neguse, Buck.

EQUALITY ACT: The House has passed the Equality Act (H.R. 5), sponsored by Rep. David N. Cicilline, D-R.I. The bill would adopt a variety of measures aimed at barring discrimina­tion against nonheteros­exuals or on the basis of sex. Cicilline said it “builds on the Civil Rights Act and other existing laws to extend anti-discrimina­tion protection­s to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgende­r Americans.” A bill opponent, Rep. Victoria Spartz, RInd., said its provisions would work “against religious freedom, against women, against female athletes, against incarcerat­ed women, and against science and safety. A vote ‘yes’ on this bill is a vote against our daughters.” The vote, on Feb. 25, was 224 yeas to 206 nays. YEAS: Neguse. NAYS: Buck.

Senate votes

AGRICULTUR­E SECRETARY: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Tom Vilsack to serve as Agricultur­e Secretary. Vilsack served in the same post throughout both terms of the Obama administra­tion, and previously was the governor of Iowa. A supporter, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-iowa, said that Vilsack “will continue to work for family farmers and spotlight those farmers’ contributi­ons to agricultur­e and what agricultur­e does for society as a whole.” The vote, on Feb. 23, was 92 yeas to 7 nays. YEAS: Bennet D-CO, Hickenloop­er D-CO

AMBASSADOR TO UNITED NATIONS: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Linda ThomasGree­nfield to serve as ambassador to the United Nations. ThomasGree­nfield has been in the State

Department’s Foreign Service for 35 years, including diplomatic postings in Africa, Europe, and Asia. A supporter, Sen. Robert Menendez, DN.J., said Thomas-greenfield had the ability to “stand up for the challenges that we face from China, to regain U.S. leverage and influence in the Security Council, to reengage our allies and hold Iran accountabl­e, and to stand firm when Israel is subject to biased attacks.” An opponent, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-ark., said she had shown a lack of willingnes­s to oppose “China’s long, dark, lamentable catalog of crimes against America, internatio­nal order and stability, and its own people.” The vote, on Feb. 23, was 78 yeas to 21 nays. YEAS: Bennet, Hickenloop­er.

ENERGY SECRETARY: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Jennifer Granholm to serve as Energy Secretary. Granholm was the governor of Michigan from 2003 to 2011; since then, she has been a law professor at the University of California-berkeley. A supporter, Sen. Gary C. Peters, D-mich., said Granholm “recognizes what must be done to advance our nation’s energy interests, because she has already achieved results in Michigan.” An opponent, Sen. John Barrasso, RWyo., said: “President Biden seems to want to pull the plug on American energy dominance. So I cannot in good conscience vote to approve his nominee for Secretary of Energy.” The vote, on Feb. 25, was 64 yeas to 35 nays. YEAS: Bennet, Hickenloop­er.

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