July 19, 2016
In this MegaVote for Connecticut's 3rd Congressional District:
Recent Congressional Votes
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Senate: Opioid Programs – Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Conference Report
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Senate: Federal Aviation Administration
Reauthorization – Motion to Concur in the House Amendments to the Senate
Amendments to the Bill
-
Senate: Opioid Programs – Agreeing to the Conference Report
-
Senate: Fiscal 2017 Defense Appropriations –
Reconsideration of Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Motion to Proceed to
the Bill
-
Senate: Fiscal 2016 Transportation-HUD Appropriations
Conference Report – Reconsideration of Motion to Invoke Cloture on the
Conference Report
-
House: Judicial Deference in Rule-Making – Passage
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House: Prohibit Purchase of Heavy Water from Iran – Passage
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House: Abortion Conscience Rights – Passage
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House: Labeling Requirements for Genetically
Modified Organisms in Foods – Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment
to the House Amendment to the Bill
-
House: Iran Sanctions – Passage
-
House: Fiscal 2017 Interior Appropriations – Passage
-
House: Bar Iran from U.S. Financial System – Passage
Editor's Note: Both chambers are in recess until September 6.
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Recent Senate Votes |
Opioid Programs – Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Conference Report - Vote Agreed to (90-2, 8 Not Voting)
 Motion
to invoke cloture (thus limiting debate) on the conference report on
the bill that contains numerous provisions to combat increasing rates of
opioid drug abuse, including through modifications to prescribing and
pain management practices, by creating or modifying programs to expand
access to treatment, particularly access to opioid overdose reversal
drugs or medication-assisted treatment that eases withdrawal symptoms,
and by establishing or strengthening specific programs for vulnerable
groups such as drug-addicted infants. It also requires the Veterans
Affairs Department to take several actions to better manage and track
the use of opioids by veterans.
 Sen. Christopher Murphy voted YES Sen. Richard Blumenthal voted YES
Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization – Motion to Concur in the House Amendments to the Senate Amendments to the Bill - Vote Agreed to (89-4, 7 Not Voting)
 The
bill extends the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) authorization
through September 2017. It also includes language that would require the
FAA to check on security practices in overseas airports that service
direct flights to the United States.
 Sen. Christopher Murphy voted YES Sen. Richard Blumenthal voted YES
Opioid Programs – Agreeing to the Conference Report - Vote Agreed to (92-2, 6 Not Voting)
 The
conference report on the bill contains numerous provisions to combat
increasing rates of opioid drug abuse, including through modifications
to prescribing and pain management practices, by creating or modifying
programs to expand access to treatment, particularly access to opioid
overdose reversal drugs or medication-assisted treatment that eases
withdrawal symptoms, and by establishing or strengthening specific
programs for vulnerable groups such as drug-addicted infants. It also
requires the Veterans Affairs Department to take several actions to
better manage and track the use of opioids by veterans.
 Sen. Christopher Murphy voted YES Sen. Richard Blumenthal voted YES
Fiscal 2017 Defense Appropriations – Reconsideration of Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Motion to Proceed to the Bill - Vote Rejected (55-42, 3 Not Voting)
 The
Senate rejected a McConnell, R-Ky., motion to invoke cloture on the
motion to proceed to the bill that would provide billions in
discretionary defense spending for the Defense Department.
 Sen. Christopher Murphy voted NO Sen. Richard Blumenthal voted NO
Fiscal
2016 Transportation-HUD Appropriations Conference Report –
Reconsideration of Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Conference Report - Vote Rejected (52-44, 4 Not Voting)
 Motion
to invoke cloture (thus limiting debate) on the conference report on
the bill which would provide $1.1 billion in supplemental funding for
the government to prepare for and respond to the public health threat
posed by the Zika virus, and it would provide a total of $185 billion
for the Veterans Affairs Department and military construction in fiscal
2017 — including $82.5 billion in discretionary spending subject to the
budget caps, $102.5 billion in mandatory spending and $172 million in
Overseas Contingency Operations funding. The Zika funding would include
$933 million in domestic funding and $175 million for international
activities, with approximately $750 million of the total being offset
through rescissions to Ebola, Affordable Care Act, and other Health and
Human Services Department funding. Sixty votes are needed to invoke
cloture.
 Sen. Christopher Murphy voted NO Sen. Richard Blumenthal voted NO
|
Recent House Votes |
Judicial Deference in Rule-Making – Passage - Vote Passed (240-171, 22 Not Voting)
 The
bill effectively overturns two Supreme Court decisions that require
courts to give substantial deference to an agency’s interpretation of
the law it is implementing and to its own interpretation of regulations.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Prohibit Purchase of Heavy Water from Iran – Passage - Vote Passed (249-176, 8 Not Voting)
 The
bill prohibits federal funds from being used to purchase heavy water (a
byproduct of nuclear fuel processing) from Iran, or to issue licenses
to purchase heavy water.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Abortion Conscience Rights – Passage - Vote Passed (245-182, 6 Not Voting)
 The
bill prohibits the federal government, as well as state and local
governments, from penalizing, retaliating against or otherwise
discriminating against a health care provider because the provider does
not provide or sponsor abortion coverage. It provides for a complaint
process and civil actions for any violations through the Health and
Human Services and Justice departments.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Labeling
Requirements for Genetically Modified Organisms in Foods – Motion to
Concur in the Senate Amendment to the House Amendment to the Bill - Vote Passed (306-117, 10 Not Voting)
 The
bill establishes the nation's first mandatory requirements for food
companies to label genetically modified food products. The measure
directs the Agriculture Department to create within two years
regulations for determining which foods qualify for labeling as
genetically modified. The proposal offers food companies the option of
on-label disclosure, the use of a symbol developed by the Agriculture
Department or electronic bar codes that consumers can scan with their
smart phones.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Iran Sanctions – Passage - Vote Passed (246-179, 8 Not Voting)
 The
bill generally expands and strengthens existing sanctions against Iran
related to its ballistic-missile program, support for international
terrorism and its ongoing record of human rights abuses against its own
population. Specifically, the measure requires that the president apply
terrorism sanctions to the Revolutionary Guards within 120 days of
enactment, rather than giving him the discretion available under current
law.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Fiscal 2017 Interior Appropriations – Passage - Vote Passed (231-196, 6 Not Voting)
 The
measure provides a total of $32.1 billion in net discretionary spending
subject to budget caps. It increases funding for the National Park
Service, U.S. Geological Survey, Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian
Health Service but cuts funding for EPA, the Bureau of Land Management,
Office of Surface Mining and the Fish and Wildlife Service. It includes
numerous policy provisions including those to prohibit EPA from
limiting greenhouse gas emissions for new and existing power plants,
limits methane emissions from the oil and gas industry and regulates air
emissions from offshore operations.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO
Bar Iran from U.S. Financial System – Passage - Vote Passed (246-181, 6 Not Voting)
 The
bill codifies existing regulations that prohibit the administration
from allowing the U.S. dollar to be used to facilitate trade
transactions with Iran, and it upholds Iran's designation as a "primary
money-laundering concern." The prohibition covers direct dollar
transactions and "work-arounds," including dollar-clearing, dollar-based
conversions and dollar-related foreign currency transactions.
 Rep. Rosa DeLauro voted NO |
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