[Congressional biography]
Born: July 10, 1976 in New York City, NY
Education:
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Career:
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Date | Subject | Result | Conserv. Position | Slotkin Voted | |
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2020-01-10 | Blocking Excessive Regulations within the Chemical Industry [HR535] | Rejected (161-243) |
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Burgess (R-TX) amendment to the PFAS Action Act which would protect consumers from draconian product bans related to certain chemical compounds that have been approved for thousands of market applications by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for nearly 40 years. Specifically, the amendment would eliminate the bill's draconian regulations on perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS) which are used in countless products, including cookware, food packaging and firefighting. The amendment would eliminate the bill's mandate that the federal Environmental Protection Agency designate two PFAS compounds (PFOA and PFOS) as hazardous substances under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (commonly referred to as the Superfund). Additionally, the amendment would block the potential "hazardous" designation of approximately 7,800 additional PFAS compounds. The amendment would better align legislative directives with the findings of the FDA which held at the time of this vote that the science surrounding potential health effects is "developing" and that numerous federal agencies had yet to make conclusive findings. ACU recognizes that government has a role in protecting the public against the harm of dangerous chemicals. However, ACU believes government action should be based on sound scientific data that demonstrate a legitimate risk to public health and safety and therefore opposes this bill's hasty and heavy-handed regulations that ultimately enrich plaintiffs' attorneys and harm consumers. |
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2020-01-15 | Appointing Impeachment Managers for the Trial of President Donald J. Trump [HRES798] | Agreed To (228-193) |
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In a purely partisan effort, Speaker Pelosi (D-CA) and Democratic Minority Leader Schumer (D-NY) launched a coup attempt against the President of the United States via this resolution that appoints seven members of the House of Representatives to serve as managers. These seven members, who all have abysmal ACUF Lifetime Ratings, are: Reps. Schiff (D-CA), Nadler (D-NY), Lofgren (D-CA), Jeffries (D-NY), Demings (D-FL), Crow (D-CO), and Garcia (D-TX). ACU recognizes the Constitution permits impeachment only in cases of "treason, bribery, and other high crimes and misdemeanors" and that the framers explicitly rejected the parliamentary system wherein a legislative body may remove an executive merely because legislators dislike the President. ACU opposes this motion to advance a coup against a President who has courageously fought for and advanced countless conservative principles and policies. | |||||
2020-02-05 | Increasing Unfunded Liabilities by Removing a Fiscal Safeguard at the U.S. Postal Service [HR2382] | Agreed To (309-106) |
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The USPS Fairness Act, sponsored by Rep. DeFazio (D-OR), would impose enormous additional unfunded liabilities on taxpayers by removing a critical fiscal safeguard at the United States Postal Service (USPS). Specifically, the bill would repeal a provision of the 2006 Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act which requires USPS to prepay the future retirement benefits of its employees. As a result, taxpayers would be exposed to even greater unfunded liabilities. Encouraging the USPS to further deviate from wise fiscal management is especially reckless considering the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund has an abysmal funding ratio of merely 41%. ACU has long-opposed Congress' nasty habit of "kicking the can down the road" and supports reining in and reforming the USPS rather than recklessly driving up taxpayer burdens. | |||||
2020-02-06 | Protecting the Right-to-Work without Mandatory Union Dues Collections [HR2474] | Rejected (186-235) |
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Meadows (R-NC) amendment to the Protecting the Right to Organize Act which would protect employees' right to work without being forced to pay dues to a labor union or employee organization. Specifically, the amendment would strike a union "fair share agreement" provision in the bill, thereby preserving the Right-to-Work laws of 27 states that the bill aims to nullify. ACU has long supported the right to work without joining a union or paying dues, as well as expanding employee freedom and economic growth. | |||||
2020-02-07 | Channeling Billions of Additional Funds to Puerto Rico under the Guise of "Disaster Relief" [HR5687] | Passed (237-161) |
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The Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief and Puerto Rico Disaster Tax Relief Act of 2020, sponsored by Rep. Lowey (D-NY), would grow the U.S. budget deficit (already over $1 trillion annually) by an additional $20 billion over the next decade to primarily expand welfare programs and enrich government-favored developers in Puerto Rico. The bill would appropriate $4.67 billion in disaster aid for Puerto Rico, despite the fact Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) disaster relief fund had a balance of $34.84 billion at the time of this vote. Additionally, the bill would expand numerous individual and corporate welfare programs without any evidence of their effectiveness. ACU believes it insulting to taxpayers to provide even more disaster funding to a territory embattled in corruption, and finds this spending reckless considering that just last year FEMA fired several employees who were convicted of $1.8 billion in fraud involving government contractors. | |||||
2020-02-13 | Violating the Constitutional Amendment Process in Order to Advance the Long-Expired Equal Rights Amendment [HJRES79] | Agreed To (232-183) |
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This resolution, sponsored by Rep. Speier (D-CA), seeks to ratify the left's Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the U.S. Constitution by eliminating the 1979 ratification deadline. The ERA has nothing to do with treating individuals equally, but instead is a tool that was introduced by the left in 1972 to provide judges carte blanche authority to abuse the legal system, including attacking the private sector and providing "rights" to abortions. Proponents of the ERA failed to meet the congressionally established deadline (1979) for ratification by 37 states. In response, this unconstitutional resolution seeks to provide a retroactive 41-year extension. | |||||
2020-02-28 | Infringing Individual Liberties by Imposing Draconian Restrictions on the Nicotine Industry [HR2339] | Passed (213-195) |
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The Protecting American Lungs and Reversing the Youth Tobacco Epidemic Act of 2020, sponsored by Rep. Pallone (D-NJ), would infringe individual liberties by imposing a series of draconian restrictions on tobacco and nicotine products. Most concerningly, the bill would ban all flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, and would apply the flavor ban to all electronic nicotine delivery systems, including "vaping" devices. Additionally, the bill would end the sale of nearly all online tobacco products and force the federal Food and Drug Administration to implement "track and trace" technology on all tobacco products. Furthermore, the bill would impose new fees and taxes on nicotine products and their manufacturers, enact additional labeling and marketing mandates and increase civil penalties for violations. ACU believes the usage of tobacco and e-cigarettes is a personal liberty issue, and believes government regulations on products are only appropriate when their usage substantially impacts others. | |||||
2020-03-14 | Imposing Costly New Mandates on Businesses Battling COVID-19 and Advancing Billions in New Spending with No Offsets [HR6201] | Agreed To (363-40) |
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The so-called Families First Coronavirus Response Act imposes serious threats to small businesses amid the disastrous economic shutdowns imposed in reaction to the Chinese coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. Specifically, the bill increases spending by $300 billion despite massive revenue shortfalls and imposes costly paid leave mandates. Under the bill,
other public and private paid-leave policies are duplicated by forcing businesses with fewer than 500 workers to provide employees with 10 weeks' pay at two-thirds of normal pay if they are attending to a family member due to the outbreak. An additional two weeks' leave must be provided for "self-quarantining," attending to an individual who is isolated, or attending to a child whose school or childcare provider has been closed. While employers are eventually reimbursed these costs, the bill's
refundable payroll tax credit approach does not provide timely relief to cash-strapped businesses. Furthermore, the bill includes no offsets to account for the massive new spending, which includes increases for unemployment, Medicaid and other government welfare programs. ACU recognizes that while certain improvements were made to the bill prior to passage, such as softening the impact on businesses with fewer than 50 workers, lawmakers failed to pass provisions similar to the Sen. Johnson (R-WI) amendment which would have included critical reforms and removed the paid leave mandates. ACU encourages private employers to be sensitive to their employees' needs, but we oppose government imposing new burdens on employers that may destroy some businesses and end employment for those most in need. |
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2020-05-15 | Fueling Pelosi's Quest for Power by Authorizing Proxy Voting [HRES965] | Agreed To (217-189) |
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This resolution, sponsored by Rep. McGovern (D-MA), enables Speaker Pelosi (D-CA) to further her quest for power by permitting proxy voting, or the assignment of one member's vote to another, for the first time in the 231-year history of the U.S. House of Representatives. The resolution also permits remote committee proceedings and authorizes both of these schemes to take place for 45 days during the Chinese coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. Of course, once achieving this "temporary" power, Speaker Pelosi extended the scheme through the 2021 session. ACU recognizes proxy voting directly violates the U.S. Constitution's quorum and "yeas and nays" requirements that serve as a safeguard against replacing the votes of lawmakers elected by the People with the votes of lawmakers favored by political leadership. ACU opposes these schemes that are designed to silence the American people's voices during a crisis in order to advance the authoritarian aspirations of Speaker Pelosi. | |||||
2020-05-15 | Advancing an Endless List of Leftist Initiatives through the $3.4 Trillion HEROES Act [HR6800] | Passed (208-199) |
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The so-called Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions Act, sponsored by Rep. Lowey (D-NY), represents the largest spending bill in our nation's history. The 1,800-page bill, supposedly in response to the Chinese coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, would provide $3.4 billion for countless leftist initiatives and would eliminate numerous safeguards of election integrity ahead of the 2020 presidential election. For example, the bill would provide $915 billion in bailouts to state and local governments, a bailout of the US Postal Service, another round of $1,200 stimulus checks (including to illegal immigrants), tens of millions in "environmental justice" grants and up to $10,000 in student loan forgiveness. Additionally, the bill would force all states to conduct mail in voting and would forbid them from enacting any type of identification requirement, such as voter ID. Furthermore, the bill would empower fraudulent ballot harvesting schemes by allowing ballots to be returned by individuals other than the voter. Finally, the bill extends the weekly $600 federal unemployment benefit through January 2021, which disincentivizes work due to
some employees earning more on unemployment than on the job. ACU finds it unfathomable that Congress would consider a $3.4 trillion spending package just two months after enacting a $2.2 trillion package and recognizes that this enormous spending amounts to $16,850 (plus interest) per every American. ACU opposes this irresponsible liberal wish list constructed by Speaker Pelosi (D-CA). |
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2020-05-28 | Advancing Warrantless Surveillance of Americans via FISA Reauthorization without Conservative Reforms [HR6172] | Agreed To (284-122) |
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This procedural motion is designed to
advance the USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act without conservative reforms, such as those advocated by President Trump or implemented under the amendment offered by Sen. Lee (R-UT) and Sen. Leahy (D-VT). Specifically, the measure reauthorizes through 2023 three Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) authorities that had expired under the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001. The FISA courts are designed to surveil foreign threats to U.S. national security and operate largely independently from the U.S. justice system with judges picked solely by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. By reauthorizing without reforms, FISA courts would be able to continue to deviate from their foreign assignments and instead circumvent the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution
and infringe the privacy rights of millions of American citizens. ACU recognizes that the nation witnessed demonstrable evidence of the need for reform, given that the Obama FBI was caught red-handed exploiting FISA courts to spy on the 2016 Trump campaign. ACU supports the founders' belief in the Fourth Amendment and supports significant reforms to the Patriot Act and FISA to help protect Americans from unlawful search and seizure. The House passed a motion to disagree with the Senate amendments and send the bill to conference. (Following this vote, the bill was formally withdrawn from consideration.) |
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2020-06-25 | Advancing the Left's All-Out Attack on the Police [HR7120] | Passed (236-181) |
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The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020, sponsored by Rep. Bass (D-CA), serves as an all-out attack on law enforcement and would have tremendous negative consequences on local communities and public safety. Unlike the meaningful reforms laid out in the JUSTICE Act sponsored by Sen. Scott (R-SC), this bill contains numerous provisions that would expose officers to such great criminal and legal liabilities that they would be unable to properly carry out their duties as public servants. The bill also contains provisions that would essentially federalize local police departments, while doing nothing to address collective bargaining agreements which protect bad cops by making it nearly impossible to fire them. ACU supports improving government accountability and increasing transparency through measures such as the JUSTICE Act and believes all police misconduct should be investigated and penalized according to the law. However ACU opposes the promotion of lawlessness through the leftist notion of "defunding the police" and opposes this measure which harms public safety. | |||||
2020-06-26 | Repealing Safeguards on Taxpayer Student Loan Forgiveness Implemented by the Trump Administration [HJRES76] | Veto Sustained (238-173) |
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This resolution, sponsored by Rep. Lee (D-CA), would invoke the Congressional Review Act (CRA) in an attempt to repeal the strong policies of the Trump administration relating to student loans. The CRA properly allows Congress to repeal rules and regulations of the executive branch. However, this resolution would improperly allow thousands of ineligible individuals to abuse a government program which socializes the cost of select individuals' student debt. The Trump administration's reform is expected to reduce abuse of the program by clarifying definitions such as "financial harm" and "misrepresentation." The Trump administration's reform is expected to save taxpayers over $11 billion over the next 10 years. ACU supports the Trump administration's effort to combat abuse of government programs and opposes the left's quest to socialize all student loan debt. | |||||
2020-06-26 | Expanding Democratic Political Power through DC Statehood [HR51] | Passed (232-180) |
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The Washington DC Admission Act, sponsored by Rep. Norton (D-DC), is designed to expand the power of the Democrat Party by making the District of Columbia the 51st state. Under the bill, the heavily Democratic-leaning district would be apportioned two senators in the U.S. Senate and one representative in the U.S. House of Representatives. The federal district would be reduced to a small strip of land that would include the U.S. Capitol Building, the White House and the National Mall. ACU recognizes this is purely a political measure to shift the balance of power in Congress by granting a heavily liberal region three new members. ACU further recognizes that if politicians truly cared about representation, they would ask Maryland to follow Virginia's lead in absorbing its portion of the district that was previously included in the state's borders. | |||||
2020-06-29 | Repealing Conservative Reforms in the Banking Industry Implemented by the Trump Administration [HJRES90] | Agreed To (230-179) |
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This resolution, sponsored by Rep. Waters (D-CA), would invoke the Congressional Review Act to repeal conservative reforms to the Community Reinvestment Act implemented by the Trump administration. The Congressional Review Act properly allows Congress to repeal rules and regulations of the executive branch. However, the Community Reinvestment Act is a tool for extortion against bankers by preventing banks from expanding or merging unless they pay off various radical-left activists through certain banking decisions mandated by government. The reforms made by the Trump administration provided greater regulatory clarity and certainty, and ultimately helped make it easier for banks to comply with the Community Reinvestment Act. ACU supported the Trump administration's efforts to reduce regulatory barriers, thus lowering lending costs and expanding investment. | |||||
2020-07-01 | Reducing Taxpayer Costs by Eliminating Prevailing Wage Mandates on Federal Highway and Public Transportation Projects [HR2] | Rejected (147-274) |
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Foxx (R-NC) amendment to the Moving Forward Act, sponsored by Rep. DeFazio (D-OR), would reduce taxpayer costs by eliminating federal prevailing wage mandates on federal-aid highway and public transportation projects. The prevailing wage originated under the Davis-Bacon Act, a Depression-era policy which forces companies contracting with the government to pay their employees above-market wages. ACU recognizes that research by Suffolk University found that Davis-Bacon requirements cost taxpayers an additional $8.6 billion annually and add 9.9% to construction costs. | |||||
2020-07-21 | Undermining the Trump Administration's Afghanistan Withdrawal Strategy [HR6395] | Rejected (129-284) |
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Omar (D-MN) amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 which would undermine the Trump administration's strategy to completely withdraw American troops from Afghanistan. In February of 2020, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo negotiated a historic agreement between the U.S. and the Taliban to withdraw all American troops from Afghanistan by May of 2021. The withdrawal was conditioned on the Taliban breaking all ties with international terrorist organizations, including al-Qaeda, among other commitments. This amendment would hamstring the Trump administration's efforts to achieve that historic
peace agreement by mandating the complete withdrawal of troops by April 29, 2021 -- regardless of the Taliban's compliance with the agreement -- unless continued presence is authorized by a separate vote of Congress. At the time of this vote, the U.S. troop level in Afghanistan had been reduced to roughly 8,500, down from the 13,000 at the signing of the agreement, and far below the peak levels of 100,000 in 2011. ACU recognizes President Trump has a stellar -- if not unmatched -- track record in avoiding conflict and bringing peace across the global stage. ACU opposes this amendment's reckless stunt which jeopardizes national security, stability in the Middle East and conclusion of the conflict by greenlighting the Taliban to renege on its promises. |
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2020-07-22 | Fueling Government Land-Grabbing through Mandatory Spending for the Land and Water Conservation Fund [HR1957] | Agreed To (310-107) |
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This bill, known as the Great American Outdoors Act, further expands the federal government's enormous land holdings. Most concerningly, the bill makes the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) a mandatory spending program (as opposed to discretionary) thus guaranteeing $900 million a year in spending even during economic downturns. The LWCF is used to expand federal land holdings, which produces perverse results that harm private property rights through voracious landgrabs and restrictions on the extraction of mineral rights. ACU believes spending should always be discretionary and not mandatory because the people should always have a say in how their money will be spent; scarce taxpayer resources should be reserved for essential government functions and not for further expanding federal land control -- especially considering the federal government already controls an astonishing and unsustainable 28% of the country's total land. | |||||
2020-07-23 | Reining in Out-of-Control Foreign Aid Spending through a 5% Reduction [HR7608] | Rejected (88-329) |
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Allen (R-GA) amendment to the first minibus appropriations bill covering the Departments of State, Agriculture, Interior and Veterans Affairs, which would provide relief from a deluge of wasteful spending under the bill through a decrease in spending on foreign aid. Within the underlying bill, foreign aid spending is set at $65.87 billion, which represents an increase of nearly 15% ($8.5 billion) over the previous fiscal year. The Allen amendment would minimize the increase by cutting the foreign aid within the bill by 5% ($3.3 billion), which would still result in a roughly 10% increase in spending compared to last year. The bill overspends on foreign aid by nearly $22 billion compared to the budget requested by the Trump administration ($44.1 billion). ACU believes it is appalling that Congress continues to resort to reckless deficit spending and believes it is imperative that much larger spending cuts are implemented to combat the nation's $27 trillion national debt, but supported this amendment as a step in the right direction. | |||||
2020-07-30 | Blocking the Department of Justice from Working to Overturn Obamacare [HR7617] | Agreed To (234-181) |
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Underwood (D-IL) amendment to the second minibus appropriations bill covering the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Justice, Energy, Labor, Health and Human Services, Transportation and Housing and Urban Development, which would block President Trump's Department of Justice (DOJ) from continuing its ongoing fight to overturn Obamacare. The amendment is in response to pending litigation before the U.S. Supreme Court, in which the DOJ, along with eighteen state Attorneys General, argue Obamacare is unconstitutional because Congress reduced the law's individual mandate penalty to zero in the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017. The left is also using this measure as part of their unmerited political attack on Judge Amy Coney Barret, whom President Trump nominated to the Supreme Court and is expected to hear the case. ACU has long opposed Obamacare and its heavy-handed mandates which have led to skyrocketing health care costs, and supports providing consumers with more affordable health care by permitting them to select the health plans that best suit their needs. | |||||
2020-09-17 | Expanding Lawsuit Abuse by Imposing Excessive Labor Mandates on Private Businesses [HR2694] | Passed (329-73) |
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The so-called Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, sponsored by Rep. Nadler (D-NY), would subject businesses to lawsuit abuse by imposing a series of excessive workplace mandates on employers. Under the bill, employers with 15 or more employees would be forced to alter operations in order to afford pregnant women a series of expanded benefits including modified work schedules, job restructuring, the acquisition or modification of equipment, and various other requested accommodations. Additionally, employers would be prohibited from placing pregnant employees on leave if there is another "reasonable accommodation" available. ACU recognizes the challenges of choosing life and raising a child, but believes this measure will merely empower plaintiffs' attorneys to pursue frivolous litigation against employers. | |||||
2020-09-24 | Advancing Countless Costly "Green" Energy Development and Energy Efficiency Initiatives [HR4447] | Passed (220-185) |
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The Clean Economy Jobs and Innovation Act, sponsored by Rep. O'Halleran (D-AZ), packages together countless leftist initiatives relating to "green" energy development and energy efficiency. The bill would authorize the appropriation of over $125 billion over the next five years to fund the expansion of wind, solar, hydro, nuclear and geothermal power, as well as numerous energy efficiency programs and electric vehicle deployment and infrastructure. The bill also creates numerous "environmental justice" programs and directs taxpayer funds and benefits to unions, "disadvantaged" individuals and other government-favored entities and portions of the population. ACU supports all sources of energy and does not believe government should favor one source of energy over another. ACU opposes this Trojan-horse Green New Deal which would choke economic growth, drive up consumer costs and proliferate cronyism. Members who voted against the bill but expressed opposition on the grounds the provisions were not leftist enough were recorded as opposing the ACU position. | |||||
2020-12-03 | Reducing Competition through Excessive Restrictions on "Big Cat" Ownership [HR1380] | Agreed To (272-114) |
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The Big Cat Public Safety Act, sponsored by Rep. Quigley (D-IL), would place excessive new restrictions on the ownership of big cats (i.e., lions, tigers, cheetahs, jaguars) in order to restrict the ability of small, community and family-owned zoos to compete with the big zoo industry. The bill would establish a new licensing regime that significantly restricts who may own big cats, and would prohibit exhibitors from providing public access to them, including a ban on "cub petting." ACU recognizes this bill as a prime example of profit-motivated business competitors petitioning government to quash competition. The bill was lobbied by Carole Baskin, whose tax-exempt Big Cat Rescue "sanctuary" would be exempt from restrictions in the bill while her competitors would be stifled. ACU recognizes that big cat ownership is regulated at the state level and opposes this crony measure designed to restrict competition and enrich special interests. | |||||
2020-12-10 | Attempting to Restore Election Integrity | ||||
In the 2020 presidential election, Americans witnessed the intentional undermining of our election integrity systems. Using the Chinese coronavirus (COVID-19) as cover, scores of states implemented universal "mail-in ballot" schemes and other policies that weakened ballot integrity and produced widespread irregularities. In response, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed suit against
four states (Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin) due to the actions of their government officials. The Attorneys General of 17 additional states filed a joint brief in support of Texas v. Pennsylvania, et al., and 126 members of the House of Representatives filed an amicus brief in support of the suit. ACUF's Center to Protect Elections is a leader in rebuilding the safeguards of our election systems and ensuring that every legal vote counts. If our election system does not respect that
principle, then American democracy will cease to exist. ACU applauds the 126 lawmakers who stood up to defend the integrity of our election system that is inherent to our democracy and recorded them as supporting the ACU position. The 309 members who remained silent or actively obstructed the resolution were recorded as opposing the ACU position. The Texas amicus brief was submitted on December 10, 2020. The Supreme Court dismissed the case "on standing" without examining the evidence through litigation on December 11, 2020. |
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2020-12-21 | Advancing Cronyism and Out-of-Control Spending through a $2.3 Trillion Spending Package [HR133] | Agreed To (359-53) |
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This spending package epitomizes the worst of the D.C. establishment's spending habits. This bill was sold as a COVID-19 response package but actually includes $1.4 trillion in budgetary spending unrelated to the pandemic. The remaining $900 billion was supposedly directed to government responses to the Chinese coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. Negotiated in secret, without the opportunity for elected officials to offer amendments, this 5,593-page omnibus is the longest bill ever passed by Congress and comes just months after the passage of the CARES Act, another $2.2 trillion spending package. The bill contains carve-outs for every imaginable special interest group in the "swamp", from tax breaks for racehorse owners to $10 million in funding for "gender programs" in Pakistan. While the bill provides $600 direct payments to children and adults earning up to $75,000 a year, the bill represents a cost of $6,925 (plus interest) per every American. ACU believes it is appalling that Congress continues to pass reckless deficit spending while providing lawmakers and the public mere hours to even read the proposals. The spending package was passed via two roll call votes in the House, with the first vote pertaining in part to defense and national security, and the second vote (which is scored here) covering the remaining spending. | |||||
2020-12-28 | Expanding Wealth Redistribution by Hiking Stimulus Check Payouts from $600 to $2,000 [HR9051] | Agreed To (275-134) |
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The Caring for Americans with Supplemental Help Act, sponsored by Rep. Neal (D-MA), would expand wealth redistribution by increasing stimulus check payouts (the $2.3 trillion spending package) from $600 to $2,000. As a result, every individual and each of their dependents earning up to $75,000 ($150,000 per couple) would be provided $2,000. Even individuals earning up to $87,000 ($174,000 per couple) would receive cash welfare, albeit in smaller checks. ACU supports the right of Americans to manage their own risks related to illnesses and believes many of government's reactions to COVID-19 have done more harm than good. ACU opposes utilizing the pandemic as an excuse to grow government and redistribute wealth via "stimulus" which will only further grow the nation's $27 trillion national debt. |
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). |