Back
to House Scorecard
Farr/Taylor Letter to Armed Services Chair and
Ranking Members
These 35 members sent a letter September 20th, 2004 to the chair and ranking
members of the Armed Services Committee in both chambers calling for them
to accept the House version of legislation establishing the maximum number
of US troops permitted in Colombia at 500, rather than the Senate's higher
cap of 800. The Senate's version prevailed (it also set a higher cap on
the number of contractors, at 600). Signers of the letter are marked with
an X.
McGovern letter on Human Rights Defenders
These 74 members of Congress sent a letter February 12, 2004 to Colombian
President Alvaro Uribe, calling upon him to respect the role of human
rights defenders in a democratic society and to provide adequate protection
measures to threatened activists. Signers of the letter are marked with
an X.
SOLVE Act
A joint bill introduced by Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) and Rep. Luis Gutierrez
(D-IL) to provide for comprehensive immigration reform, both the House
and Senate versions are identical. Immigration reform advocates consider
this bill to set the standard in Congress. There was no vote on this bill
in 2004. Co-sponsors are marked with an X.
Juarez Resolution
A resolution to express sympathy for the families of the victims of women's
murders in Ciudad Juarez and Chihuahua City, Mexico. It also outlines
a number of steps the US government can take to help address the murders.
The joint resolution was introduced by Rep. Hilda Solis (D-CA) in the
House and by Senator Jeff Bingaman (D-NM) in the Senate. There was no
vote on this bill in 2004. Co-sponsors are marked with an X.
Davis Amendment
This amendment to the Transportation/Treasury appropriations bill sought
to roll back new Bush Administration restrictions on Cuban-American family
travel. The measure passed the House by a vote of 225-174, but was removed
from the final version of the bill by the House/Senate conference. A positive
vote is marked with an X.
Rangel Amendment
The Rangel Amendment would have lifted the full embargo on Cuba. This
amendment is an important signal of support for an end to the entire embargo,
even though it lost 188-225. This was a great showing given the political
climate of the early fall, when elections were weighing heavily on members’
minds. A positive vote is marked with an X.
CJS Amendment
This measure would have rolled back restrictions on the types of packages
Cuban-Americans can send to their families on the island. It passed 221-194
during the debate on the Commerce/Justice/State appropriation bill in
early summer. Again the provision was stripped out of the final version
of the bill by the House/Senate conference. A positive vote is marked
with an X.
Back to House
Scorecard
|