This bill represents a continued attack on financial regulation, underfunds agencies that are critical to the protection of workers and consumers, and includes several objectionable policy riders. Congress should not use spending bills as back-door vehicles for reversing vital protections against Wall Street abuse. Attaching highly controversial and partisan poison pill policy riders that roll back financial regulations to an appropriations bill is an abuse of the appropriations process. The bill passed the House on July 19, 2018.
Vote result: Passed
YEAs: 217
NAYs: 199
Legislator | State | District | Party Sort ascending | Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rep. Tom Reed | 23 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. John Faso | 19 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Devin Nunes | 22 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Lynn Jenkins | 2 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Ken Calvert | 41 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Brian Mast | 21 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Morgan Griffith | 9 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. John Ratcliffe | 4 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Ralph Norman | 5 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Bradley Byrne | 1 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Steve Scalise | 1 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Thomas Massie | 4 | Republican | No | ||
Rep. Joe L. Barton | 6 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Mimi Walters | 45 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Leonard Lance | 7 | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Roger Marshall | Republican | Yes | |||
Rep. Jackie Walorski | 2 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Doug Lamborn | 5 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Ron Estes | 4 | Republican | Yes | ||
Rep. Paul Cook | 8 | Republican | Yes |