RightDataUSA


Judy Chu

[Congressional biography]

Born: July 7, 1953 in Los Angeles, CA

Education:

  • Attended University of California-Santa Barbara, 1973
  • UCLA, B.A., 1974
  • California School of Psychology, M.A., 1977, Ph.D., 1979

Career:

  • Psychology professor, 1981-2001

Elected Office:

  • Garvey school board, 1985-1988
  • Monterey Park city council, 1988-2001 (Mayor, 1990, 1994, 1999)
  • CA Assembly, 2001-2006
  • CA Board of Equalization, 2006-2009



Key House Vote Data for Judy Chu in 2009


Key vote data shown on this page comes from the American Conservative Union (ACU/CPAC) and Voteview.


Click on the RESULT of a specific vote to see how all members voted.

DateSubjectResultConserv.
Position
Chu
Voted
2009-07-22 Spending Caps [HR2920] Rejected
(169-259)
Ryan (R-WI) amendment that would have established spending caps through fiscal year 2014, limiting spending and deficit limits to a percentage of Gross Domestic Product.

2009-07-23 Spending Cuts [HR3288] Rejected
(181-246)
Blackburn (R-TN) amendment that would have cut discretionary government spending in the appropriations for the Departments of Housing and Transportation by 5 percent, less than the recent annual increase in appropriations.

2009-07-24 Defunding Planned Parenthood [HR3293] Rejected
(182-242)
Pence (R-IN) amendment to the Labor-HHS-Education Appropriations bill that would have eliminated funding for Planned Parenthood family planning services, which includes abortion services.

2009-11-07 Blocking Abortion Funding [HR3962] Agreed To
(240-194)
Stupak (D-MI) amendment which would insert into the health care overhaul bill the traditional ban on using taxpayer funds to provide abortion services.

2009-11-07 Health Care Overhaul -- Republican Substitute [HR3962] Rejected
(176-258)
Boehner (R-OH) amendment which served as the Republican substitute to the health care overhaul bill. The substitute would create state high-risk pools for uninsurable individuals, permit competition in health insurance across state lines, reform medical malpractice law, and allow small business to pool employees to get low-cost insurance.

2009-11-07 "Affordable" Care Act ("Obamacare") [HR3962] Passed
(220-215)
The House passed a massive overhaul to the nation's health care and health insurance industry, by creating a government-run insurance program, forcing everyone to purchase insurance approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services or pay a steep tax, taxing companies that do not provide insurance, and requiring insurers to accept individuals who are already sick. The bill also imposed an income tax surcharge to help cover costs.

2009-12-03 Estate Tax Repeal [HR4154] Failed
(187-233)
The House defeated an attempt to extend the repeal of the estate ("death") tax through 2011, instead of re-instituting it at the end of 2010.

2009-12-03 Estate Tax Extension [HR4154] Passed
(225-200)
The House passed a bill making permanent the estate and gift tax levels now in the law.

2009-12-11 Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) Repeal [HR4173] Failed
(190-232)
The House defeated an attempt to repeal the Troubled Asset Relief Program and lower the national debt limit.

2009-12-11 Financial Industry Regulation [HR4173] Passed
(223-202)
The House passed an overhaul of regulation of the financial industry that creates an entirely new government agency. The bill also sets national mortgage standards, federal registration of investment advisers, overrules state consumer financial laws, and authorizes the use of TARP funds for housing relief. ACU opposed this massive expansion of federal regulation without clear limits and definitions as to what would be regulated or how.



  Represents a "Yes" vote.

  Represents a "No" vote.

  Indicates that this member voted against the conservative position on a particular vote.

"No vote" means that this member did not cast a vote (or voted 'Present' instead of Yes or No).