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How they voted: NC congressional votes for the week ending Feb. 15

A look at how North Carolina members of Congress voted during the previous week.
Posted 2024-02-17T00:44:12+00:00 - Updated 2024-03-01T20:48:53+00:00

Here's how North Carolina members of Congress voted over the previous week.

Along with the week's roll call votes, the House also passed the No Dollars To Uyghur Forced Labor (H.R. 4039), to prohibit the use of funds supporting any activities within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China.

House votes

SEX AND LABOR TRAFFICKING: The House has passed the Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act (H.R. 5856), sponsored by Rep. Christopher H. Smith, R-N.J. The bill would reauthorize a 2000 law that created a variety of federal programs to reduce human trafficking. Smith said the programs were needed "to protect victims, prosecute traffickers, and to the extent possible, prevent human trafficking in the first place." The vote, on Feb. 13, was 414 yeas to 11 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Edwards R-NC (11th), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

IMPEACHING HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY: The House has passed a resolution (H. Res. 863), sponsored by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for willfully violating federal laws regarding immigration and border security, with resulting harms from an increase in illegal immigration and fentanyl imports into the U.S. Taylor Greene said: "His willful refusal to secure the border has bankrupted communities, closed down U.S. schools that our children attend, drowned hospitals, and incapacitated law enforcement, while empowering criminal cartels and illegal aliens." A resolution opponent, Rep. Bennie G. Thompson, D-Miss., said: "For a breach of public trust to rise to a high crime and misdemeanor, it would require conduct intended to serve an official's own benefit or the benefit of a foreign power. Secretary Mayorkas has done nothing of the sort." The vote, on Feb. 13, was 214 yeas to 213 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Edwards R-NC (11th)
  • NAYS: Adams D-NC (12th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

HAMAS-ISRAEL WAR: The House has passed a resolution (H. Res. 966), sponsored by Rep. Lois Frankel, D-Fla., to condemn acts of sexual violence committed by Hamas in its war with Israel, and call for global action to criminalize rape and sexual assault. Frankel said the resolution "reaffirms our support for an independent investigation of rape and sexual violence committed by Hamas and reaffirms our commitment to supporting survivors of rape and sexual violence." The vote, on Feb. 14, was unanimous with 418 yeas, and 1 voting present.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Edwards R-NC (11th), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

SYRIAN GOVERNMENT: The House has passed the Assad Regime Anti-Normalization Act (H.R. 3202), sponsored by Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., to bar the U.S. government from recognizing any Syrian government led by Bashar al-Assad, and expand sanctions against the Assad regime. Wilson said the bill "holds those seeking to do business with the unrepentant, mass murderer and drug trafficker, Bashar al-Assad, accountable." The vote, on Feb. 14, was 389 yeas to 32 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Edwards R-NC (11th), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

UYGHURS IN CHINA: The House has passed the Uyghur Policy Act (H.R. 2766), sponsored by Rep. Young Kim, R-Calif., to establish at the State Department a position devoted to the Uyghurs, a minority group in western China, and authorize funding through State for human rights groups advocating for Uyghurs and other minorities in China. Kim said the bill "will help us lead from a position of strength and will address several shortcomings in our existing approach in responding to these human rights abuses" against the Uyghurs. The vote, on Feb. 15, was 414 yeas to 6 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Edwards R-NC (11th), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

NATURAL GAS EXPORTS: The House has passed the Unlocking our Domestic LNG Potential Act (H.R. 7176), sponsored by Rep. August Pfluger, R-Texas, to assign the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission exclusive authority to approve or deny applications for the development of liquefied natural gas (LNG) export or import terminals in the U.S. The bill would also find that LNG exports and imports are consistent with the public interest. Pfluger said that, by reversing a recent Biden administration halt on permits for LNG exports, the bill would benefit the U.S. economy and provide foreign countries with a cleaner, more secure alternative to natural gas from Russia and other U.S. adversaries. A bill opponent, Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, D-N.J., said: "Increased LNG exports directly lead to higher natural gas prices here at home." The vote, on Feb. 15, was 224 yeas to 200 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Edwards R-NC (11th)
  • NAYS: Adams D-NC (12th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)

TIBET-CHINA RELATIONS: The House has passed the Promoting a Resolution to the Tibet-China Dispute Act (H.R. 533), sponsored by Rep. James P. McGovern, D-Mass. The bill would adopt a broader definition of Tibet than that used by China's government, and declare as stated U.S. policy that Tibet's legal status needs to be determined in accord with international law. McGovern said: "A vote for this bill is a vote to recognize the rights of the Tibetan people and a vote to insist on resolving the dispute between Tibet and the People's Republic of China peacefully." The vote, on Feb. 15, was 392 yeas to 28 nays.

  • YEAS: McHenry R-NC (10th), Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)
  • NAYS: Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Edwards R-NC (11th)

PARTNERING WITH ASIA ALLIES: The House has passed the Strengthening the Quad Act (H.R. 5375), sponsored by Rep. Gregory W. Meeks, D-N.Y., to direct the State Department to develop a working group with India, Japan, and Australia, to improve cooperation with those three countries on economic and security issues. Meeks said: "China's growing global influence and authoritarian model is serving to undermine freedom in the Indo-Pacific and beyond. We need to work with fellow democracies in the region to showcase the heft of open markets and open societies." The vote, on Feb. 15, was 379 yeas to 39 nays.

  • NOT VOTING: McHenry R-NC (10th)
  • YEAS: Foxx R-NC (5th), Hudson R-NC (9th), Murphy R-NC (3rd), Rouzer R-NC (7th), Adams D-NC (12th), Manning D-NC (6th), Ross D-NC (2nd), Nickel D-NC (13th), Davis (NC) D-NC (1st), Foushee D-NC (4th), Jackson (NC) D-NC (14th)
  • NAYS: Bishop (NC) R-NC (8th), Edwards R-NC (11th)

Senate votes

BUDGETING AND MILITARY SPENDING: The Senate has waived a budget point of order for the substitute amendment sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., to the National Security Act (H.R. 815), that would have objected to the emergency designation provisions contained in the bill. A point of order supporter, Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, said that "continuing to support the Ukraine war indefinitely is a terrible, terrible mistake." The vote, on Feb. 12, was 66 yeas to 33 nays.

  • YEAS: Tillis R-NC
  • NAYS: Budd R-NC

SUPPLEMENTAL MILITARY SPENDING: The Senate has passed the substitute amendment sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., to the National Security Act (H.R. 815). The bill would provide $95 billion of supplemental military spending in fiscal 2024 for the conflicts in Ukraine and Israel, and for Taiwan. Murray said that with the bill, "we will show dictators that their flagrant attacks will not go unchecked and they cannot steamroll our allies." An opponent, Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said: "We cannot send billions of dollars to Ukraine while America's own borders are bleeding." The vote, on Feb. 13, was 70 yeas to 29 nays.

  • YEAS: Tillis R-NC
  • NAYS: Budd R-NC

Credits