December 11, 2017
In this MegaVote for Ohio's 10th Congressional District:
Recent Congressional Votes
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Senate: Nielsen Nomination - Confirmation
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Senate: Balash Nomination - Confirmation
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Senate: Short-Term Fiscal 2018 Continuing Appropriations
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House: Tax Overhaul Motion to Request Conference
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House: Concealed Carry Reciprocity Between States
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House: Small Business Mergers Regulatory Exemption
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House: Short-Term Fiscal 2018 Continuing Appropriations
Upcoming Congressional Bills
- Senate: Grasz Nomination
- Senate: Willett Nomination
- Senate: Ho Nomination
- House: Mortgage Escrow Requirements
- House: Investigate Assets of Iranian Leaders
- House: Iranian Aircraft Purchases Financing
- House: Annual Financial Privacy Notices
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Recent Senate Votes |
Nielsen Nomination - Confirmation - Vote Confirmed (62-37, 1 Not Voting)
The Senate confirmed Kirstjen Nielsen to be secretary of Homeland Security.
Sen. Rob Portman voted YES Sen. Sherrod Brown voted NO
Balash Nomination - Confirmation - Vote Confirmed (61-38, 1 Not Voting)
The Senate confirmed Joseph Balash to be assistant secretary of the Interior.
Sen. Rob Portman voted YES Sen. Sherrod Brown voted NO
Short-Term Fiscal 2018 Continuing Appropriations - Vote Agreed to (81-14, 5 Not Voting)
The House passed the joint resolution that would provide funding for
federal government operations and services at current levels through Dec. 22, 2017,
at an annualized rate of $1.23 trillion for federal departments and
agencies covered by the 12 unfinished fiscal 2018 spending bills. The
bill also would allow state Children's Health and Insurance Programs to
receive extra redistribution funds beyond what is currently allowed,
supporting the program's operations through the end of December.
Sen. Rob Portman voted YES Sen. Sherrod Brown voted YES
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Recent House Votes |
Tax Overhaul Motion to Request Conference - Vote Passed (222-192, 19 Not Voting)
Brady,
R-Texas, motion that the House disagree with the Senate amendment and
request a conference with the Senate on the bill that would revise the
federal income tax system by lowering individual and corporate tax
rates, repealing various deductions through 2025.
Rep. Michael Turner voted YES
Concealed Carry Reciprocity Between States - Vote Passed (231-198, 4 Not Voting)
The
House passed the bill that would permit any individual authorized by
their home state to carry a concealed handgun to also carry that
concealed weapon in any other state that permits the carrying of
concealed weapons. The bill also would require a twice-annual
certification by all federal agencies, federal courts and state
governments, in coordination with the Department of Justice, to verify
that all relevant data has been reported and uploaded to the National
Instant Criminal Background Check System regarding individuals who are
not eligible to purchase firearms.
Rep. Michael Turner voted YES
Small Business Mergers Regulatory Exemption - Vote Passed (426-0, 6 Not Voting)
The
House passed the bill that would exempt brokers handling mergers and
acquisitions from Securities and Exchange Commission registration
requirements in cases in which the company being sold does not have any
class of securities required to be registered with the SEC and in the
prior fiscal year, the company's earnings, before interest or taxes, are
less than $25 million or gross revenue is less than $250 million.
Rep. Michael Turner voted YES
Short-Term Fiscal 2018 Continuing Appropriations - Vote Passed (235-193, 5 Not Voting)
The
House passed the joint resolution that would provide funding for
federal government operations and services at current levels through Dec. 22, 2017,
at an annualized rate of $1.23 trillion for federal departments and
agencies covered by the 12 unfinished fiscal 2018 spending bills. The
bill also would allow state Children's Health and Insurance Programs to
receive extra redistribution funds beyond what is currently allowed,
supporting the program's operations through the end of December.
Rep. Michael Turner voted YES
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Upcoming Votes |
Grasz Nomination
- PN878
The Senate is expected to vote on the nomination of Leonard Grasz to be a U.S. circuit judge for the Eight Circuit.
Willett Nomination
- PN1077
The Senate is expected to vote on the nomination of Don Willett to be a U.S. circuit judge for the Fifth Circuit.
Ho Nomination
- PN1108
The Senate is expected to vote on the nomination of James Ho to be a U.S. circuit judge for the Fifth Circuit.
Mortgage Escrow Requirements
- HR3971
The
bill would expand to somewhat larger companies certain exemptions from
home mortgage escrow requirements under the 2010 financial regulatory
overhaul law. Specifically, it would exempt lenders with assets of $25
billion or less from the law's requirement that they establish escrow
accounts for the first five years of "high-priced" mortgage loans, if
the lender holds the loan on its own balance sheet for three years after
the loan is made.
Investigate Assets of Iranian Leaders
- HR1638
The
bill would require the Treasury secretary to compile and submit to
Congress a report detailing the known assets in U.S. and foreign
institutions that are controlled directly or indirectly by the top
political and military leaders of Iran, how those assets were acquired
and for what purposes they are used.
Iranian Aircraft Purchases Financing
- HR4324
The
bill would require the Treasury secretary to regularly report to
Congress on any U.S. or foreign financial institutions that are involved
with the financing of Treasury-authorized purchases and export of
aircraft on behalf of Iran, and to certify that the associated financial
transactions pose no money laundering or terrorism financing risk to
the U.S. financial system and will not benefit certain Iranian
individuals and entities.
Annual Financial Privacy Notices
- HR2396
The
bill would exempt any financial services company that has not changed
its privacy policies including companies that share or sell
information on consumers to unaffiliated third parties from the
requirement that it provide annual written privacy notices to consumers,
as long as such disclosures are available online and the availability
of those notices is noted to consumers by other means, such as on
billing statements. |
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