Legislative Advocacy

Last Week In Congress: How Cascadia’s U.S. lawmakers voted (June 8th-12th)

Good morn­ing! Here’s how Cascadia’s Unit­ed States Sen­a­tors vot­ed on major issues dur­ing the leg­isla­tive week end­ing Fri­day, June 12th, 2020.

The House was in recess.

In the United States Senate

The Sen­ate cham­ber (U.S. Con­gress photo)

MAINTAINING NATIONAL PARKS, CONSERVING PUBLIC SPACES: Vot­ing 79 for and 18 against, the Sen­ate on June 10th agreed to start debate on a bill (H.R. 1957) that would great­ly increase finan­cial sup­port of fed­er­al land agen­cies includ­ing the Nation­al Park Ser­vice and also boost U.S. gov­ern­ment fund­ing of fed­er­al, state and local efforts to pur­chase and pro­tect unspoiled acreage.

To address the dete­ri­o­ra­tion of hun­dreds of nation­al parks and relat­ed areas in recent decades, the bill would allo­cate up to $6.5 bil­lion over five years for repairs and main­te­nance, with fund­ing to come main­ly from pay­ments to the Trea­sury by oil, gas and renew­able-ener­gy com­pa­nies. The bill also would guar­an­tee a $900 mil­lion annu­al bud­get for the Land and Water Con­ser­va­tion Fund, which pro­vides fed­er­al and non-fed­er­al agen­cies with funds for acquir­ing and con­serv­ing unde­vel­oped land. The LWCF is large­ly fund­ed by fees and roy­al­ties col­lect­ed from ener­gy firms engaged in off­shore drilling operations.

Cory Gard­ner, R‑Colorado, spoke in favor of advanc­ing the bill.

“This is an eco­nom­ic and jobs pack­age as much as it is a con­ser­va­tion pack­age. For every $1 mil­lion we spend in the Land and Water Con­ser­va­tion Fund, it sup­ports between six­teen and thir­ty jobs,” Gard­ner said. “It is our chance to not only pro­tect our envi­ron­ment, to catch up on deferred main­te­nance, but also to grow our econ­o­my when our econ­o­my needs the growth.”

No sen­a­tor spoke against the bill.

Vot­ing Nay (2):
Repub­li­can Sen­a­tors Jim Risch and Mike Crapo

Vot­ing Aye (2):
Demo­c­ra­t­ic Sen­a­tors Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley

Vot­ing Aye (2):
Demo­c­ra­t­ic Sen­a­tors Pat­ty Mur­ray and Maria Cantwell

Cas­ca­dia total: 4 aye votes, 2 nay votes

CONFIRMING CHARLES BROWN AS AIR FORCE CHIEF: In a unan­i­mous vote of 98 for and none against, the Sen­ate on June 9th con­firmed Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr., as U.S. Air Force chief of staff. The four-star gen­er­al becomes the first African-Amer­i­can to lead a U.S. mil­i­tary ser­vice, and will leave his post as com­man­der of the Pacif­ic Air Forces to assume the four-year term.

A com­mand pilot, Brown has record­ed more than 2,900 fly­ing hours includ­ing 130 hours in com­bat. There was no Sen­ate floor debate on the nomination.

A yes vote was to con­firm Brown to lead the Air Force.

Vot­ing Aye (2):
Repub­li­can Sen­a­tors Jim Risch and Mike Crapo

Vot­ing Aye (2):
Demo­c­ra­t­ic Sen­a­tors Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley

Vot­ing Aye (2):
Demo­c­ra­t­ic Sen­a­tors Pat­ty Mur­ray and Maria Cantwell

Cas­ca­dia total: 6 aye votes

Key votes ahead

The Sen­ate will resume debate in the week of June 15th on a fund­ing bill for the Nation­al Park Ser­vice and Land and Water Con­ser­va­tion Fund (detailed above), while the House will be in recess. The House is expect­ed to take up a bill reform­ing polic­ing prac­tices dur­ing the week of June 22nd.

Edi­tor’s Note: The infor­ma­tion in NPI’s week­ly How Cas­ca­di­a’s U.S. law­mak­ers vot­ed fea­ture is pro­vid­ed by Votera­ma in Con­gress, a ser­vice of Thomas Vot­ing Reports. All rights are reserved. Repro­duc­tion of this post is not per­mit­ted, not even with attri­bu­tion. Use the per­ma­nent link to this post to share it… thanks!

© 2020 Thomas Vot­ing Reports.

Andrew Villeneuve

Andrew Villeneuve is the founder and executive director of the Northwest Progressive Institute, as well as the founder of NPI's sibling, the Northwest Progressive Foundation. He has worked to advance progressive causes for over two decades as a strategist, speaker, author, and organizer. Andrew is also a cybersecurity expert, a veteran facilitator, a delegate to the Washington State Democratic Central Committee, and a member of the Climate Reality Leadership Corps.

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