Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How Arkansas’ congressio­nal delegation voted

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

KEY: ✔ FOR ✖ AGAINST NOT VOTING PASSED DEFEATED

VOTERAMA IN CONGRESS

HOUSE

Approving $740.5 billion for the military. Adopted 335-78, the conference report on a $740.5 billion military budget (HR6395) for fiscal 2021 that includes $69 billion to fund combat operations overseas, $60 billion-plus for active-duty and retiree health care; $8.5 billion for military constructi­on; $1 billion for addressing present and future pandemics; and hundreds of billions for weapons systems, personnel costs, and research and developmen­t. In addition, the bill would require the removal of Confederat­e names from military bases; treat global warming as a national-security threat; fund a 3% pay raise for uniformed personnel; expand programs for military victims of sexual assault; and provide Ukraine with $250 million for defending itself against Russian incursions.

The bill would require the administra­tion to provide Congress with national-security justificat­ions for President Donald Trump’s announced plans to slash U.S. troop levels in Afghanista­n and Germany. This would not prohibit the withdrawal­s but delay them until after the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden.

Adam Smith, D-Wash., said the bill “does nothing to prohibit the next president, President Biden, from completely drawing down in Afghanista­n. That is a debate he will have. So anyone who comes to the floor and says they are not voting for the bill because of [Afghanista­n] is not really telling the truth.”

Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., said: “We have spent decades trading the same villages back and forth in Afghanista­n. And I believe the administra­tion that leads our country should work to bring those troops home, and unfortunat­ely, this bill … puts barriers in the way of an administra­tion that wants to bring our troops home and put America first.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate.

✔ Rick Crawford (R) ✔ French Hill (R)

✔ Steve Womack (R) ✔ Bruce Westerman (R) Stopgap funding, covid-19 relief. Passed 343-67, a bill (HR8900) to fund the government on a stopgap basis through Dec. 18. In addition to averting a shutdown, the vote gives leaders more time to negotiate another round of emergency relief for individual­s and households facing economic hardship as a result of covid-19. If the coronaviru­s aid is agreed upon in coming days, it would be included in a permanent funding bill for the remaining nine-plus months of fiscal 2022, which would be debated against a deadline of Christmas Day.

A yes vote was to approve stopgap funding through Dec. 18.

✔ Crawford (R)

✔ Hill (R)

✔ Womack (R)

✖ Westerman (R)

SENATE

Sending military budget to president. Adopted 84-13, the conference report on a $740.5 billion military budget for fiscal 2021 (HR6395). In addition to provisions in the House summary above, the bill would prohibit U.S. troops from being deployed domestical­ly against Americans exercising their constituti­onal rights to peaceably protest; reinforce America’s role in NATO; expand health benefits to Vietnam-era veterans exposed to Agent Orange; and ensure that all federal employees have access to 12 weeks’ paid parental leave. In addition, the bill would require the removal over three years of Confederat­e names from Army bases named after officers who waged war against the United States, and from other U.S. military assets, including naval vessels named in commemorat­ion of Confederat­e military figures or battlefiel­d prowess.

The bill would add a “violent extremism” article covering hate crimes and other offenses to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, while installing an inspector general to probe white supremacis­t activities in the armed forces, and review racial and ethnic disparitie­s in the administra­tion of military justice.

James Inhofe, R-Okla., said that with China and Russia posing “the most serious threats we’ve seen … I can’t imagine having to face these people in the field in harm’s way and say, ‘Well, we didn’t pass a defense authorizat­ion bill.’ We’re going to pass it. These kids are going to get … the resources they need.”

Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said: “The bill condemns the president for proposing to move some troops out of Germany and restricts his ability to do so, even though NATO’s frontier has shifted hundreds of miles to the east and Germany hasn’t exactly carried its share of the NATO load. The Senate didn’t debate this major policy change.” A yes vote was to send the bill to President Donald Trump.

✔ John Boozman (R)

✖ Tom Cotton (R) Selling weapons to United Arab Emirates. Rejected 46-50,

a bid to block the Trump administra­tion’s planned sale of MQ-9 Reaper drones to the United Arab Emirates. These unmanned aerial vehicles are equipped with laser-guided bombs and air-toground missiles. By this vote, the Senate failed to discharge from committee a measure (SJRes77) to disapprove of the sale. On a separate vote the same day, the Senate affirmed an administra­tion plan to sell as many as 59 F-35 stealth fighter jets to the UAE. Totaling $23.5 billion, the deals drew opposition, in part, because they would skirt traditiona­l congressio­nal oversight of arms sales in the closing days of the Trump administra­tion.

Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said this is “the first time that we would sell these incredibly lethal, incredibly complicate­d technologi­es into the heart of the Middle East, a region. … What we risk doing here is fueling an arms race.” He added “there arguably is no other country on the list for the F-35s that does as much business with China and Russia as the UAE does.”

Roy Blunt, R-Mo., said the UAE has been “willing to stand with us in at least six long-term deployment­s. They come; they stay. They are side-by-side with us in the field. They have been with us in the air. … This is not any kind of gift [but] a purchase totaling $23.5 billion for equipment that is made by American companies and almost always by American workers.”

A yes vote was to effectivel­y delay the arms sales.

✖ Boozman (R)

✖ Cotton (R) Confirming Federal Election Commission­er. Confirmed 92-4, Shana M. Broussard for a seat on the Federal Election Commission. The agency’s first African-American commission­er, Broussard had been an FEC staff attorney, and before that she was an attorney with the Internal Revenue Service and an assistant district attorney in New Orleans. Her confirmati­on along with that of two other commission­ers last week gives the agency a full slate of six commission­ers for the first time since 2017. A post-Watergate panel, the FEC is charged with enforcing campaign-finance laws in federal contests, disclosing candidates’ campaign-finance data to the public, enforcing rules for contributi­ons, and spending and supervisin­g the public funding of presidenti­al elections.

A yes vote was to confirm Broussard.

✔ Boozman (R)

✔ Cotton (R)

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