WASHINGTON – This is a take a look at how space members of Congress voted over the earlier week.
Together with the week’s roll name votes, the Home additionally handed these measures by voice vote: the Veterans’ Compensation Value-of-Residing Adjustment Act (S. 777), to extend charges of compensation for veterans with service-connected disabilities and charges of compensation for the survivors of sure disabled veterans; the Korean American Vietnam Allies Lengthy Overdue for Aid Act (H.R. 366), to deal with sure people who served within the Vietnam Struggle as a member of the armed forces of Korea as a U.S. armed forces veteran for functions of the supply of well being care by the Division of Veterans Affairs; and agreed to the Senate modification to the NOTAM Enchancment Act (H.R. 346), to ascertain a job pressure on enhancements for notices to air missions.
There have been no key votes within the Senate this week.
Home votes
Home Vote 1: FENTANYL TRAFFICKING: The Home has handed the Stopping the Financing of Unlawful Artificial Medicine Act (H.R. 1076), sponsored by Rep. Monica De La Cruz, R-Texas, to require the Authorities Accountability Workplace to check the position of illicit financing of trafficking in fentanyl, methamphetamine, and related harmful artificial medication. De La Cruz mentioned the examine “will assist regulation enforcement pinpoint the enterprise mannequin of the traffickers, how they transfer and conceal their income, and what the U.S. can do to cease fentanyl cash laundering.” The vote, on Might 22, was 402 yeas to 2 nays. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh).
Home Vote 2: FINANCE IN CHINA: The Home has handed the China Monetary Risk Mitigation Act (H.R. 1156), sponsored by Rep. Abigail Davis Spanberger, D-Va. The invoice would require the Treasury Division to make a report on the impacts China’s monetary sector might have on the U.S. and its monetary stability, in addition to methods for the U.S. to work with different international locations to mitigate dangers posed by China. A supporter, Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, mentioned: “We will need to have a transparent image of the systemic dangers we face so we will reply appropriately to safeguard our financial pursuits and mitigate these threats.” The vote, on Might 22, was 400 yeas to five nays. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh).
Home Vote 3: REGULATING VEHICLE EMISSIONS: The Home has handed a decision (S.J. Res. 11), sponsored by Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., to disapprove of and void an Environmental Safety Company (EPA) rule for limiting ozone, particulate matter, and different types of air air pollution from heavy-duty motor autos that was issued this January. A decision supporter, Rep. Invoice Johnson, R-Ohio, referred to as the rule an impractical measure that will create heavy prices for “vehicles that not solely ship all the products we depend on but additionally vehicles for our farmers and ranchers, constructing contractors and landscapers, and numerous different staff and small companies.” An opponent, Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., mentioned: “This decision is yet one more extremist, Republican assault on commonsense steps EPA is taking to guard People’ well being and the atmosphere.” The vote, on Might 23, was 221 yeas to 203 nays. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh).
Home Vote 4: VETO OF SOLAR PANEL IMPORTS RESOLUTION: The Home has didn’t override President Biden’s veto of a decision (H.J. Res. 39), sponsored by Rep. Invoice Posey, R-Fla., to disapprove of and void a Commerce Division rule suspending duties on imports of photo voltaic panels that have been assembled in Southeast Asia and used elements made in China. Posey mentioned China has been utilizing pressured labor to make the polysilicon that’s used to assemble panels in neighboring international locations and circumvent U.S. tariffs on Chinese language-made panels. Due to this fact, “if we go this decision, we might help put a cease to China’s dishonest and slave labor.” An opponent, Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., mentioned: “All of us need photo voltaic merchandise manufactured proper right here at dwelling; however within the brief run, our home trade cannot enhance manufacturing quickly sufficient to fulfill demand or to fulfill our local weather objectives.” The vote, on Might 24, was 214 yeas to 205 nays, with a two-thirds majority required to override the veto. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh.
Home Vote 5: REPAYING STUDENT LOANS: The Home has handed a decision (H.J. Res. 45), sponsored by Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., to disapprove of and void an Training Division rule issued final October that suspended or cancelled funds on pupil loans. Good mentioned: “Congress should reclaim its energy and act at the moment to cease the unilateral motion of President Biden that’s exacerbating the upper training monetary disaster.” A decision opponent, Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., mentioned: “President Biden’s pupil mortgage debt aid plan will assist alleviate the yoke of pupil mortgage debt for hundreds of thousands of People.” The vote, on Might 24, was 218 yeas to 203 nays. YEAS: FEdwards R-NC (eleventh).
Home Vote 6: VETERANS AND TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION: The Home has handed the VET-TEC Authorization Act (H.R. 1669), sponsored by Rep. Juan Ciscomani, R-Ariz., to require the Veterans Affairs Division to make everlasting a program for offering support to as much as 8,000 veterans for enrolling in non-degree coaching or abilities programs which are associated to laptop programming, media software, information processing, or info sciences. Ciscomani mentioned that because it started in 2019, “not solely has this program been helpful for our veterans, however it’s essential for our employers, as effectively. We’d like a talented workforce working within the tech trade, and our veterans are the right match.” The vote, on Might 24, was 409 yeas to 9 nays. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh).
Home Vote 7: REGULATING FENTANYL-LIKE SUBSTANCES: The Home has handed the Halt All Deadly Trafficking of Fentanyl Act (H.R. 467), sponsored by Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va. The invoice would classify fentanyl-related substances as a schedule 1 managed substance, deemed to have a excessive potential for abuse, with no medical worth, and topic to sure authorized penalties consequently. Griffith mentioned assigning everlasting schedule 1 standing to the substances “will strengthen regulation enforcement’s means to prosecute fentanyl traffickers and act as a deterrent” to trafficking. A invoice opponent, Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., mentioned it “will depart our communities worse off and exacerbate present inequities in our legal justice system” by resulting in disproportionate legal penalties for minority teams. The vote, on Might 25, was 289 yeas to 133 nays. YEAS: Edwards R-NC (eleventh).