CHIPS Act of 2022, which contains $52 billion for investment in domestic semiconductor funding, including $2 billion in funding for production of mature semiconductor technologies in the United States that are necessary to the production of cars, trucks, and agricultural equipment. Passage of this legislation will ensure access to critical technologies, increase national security, and remove impediments and roadblocks to the domestic production of future technologies. The need for this legislation has become apparent with the supply shortages that have plagued domestic production for the past several years.
Vote result: Passed
YEAs: 50
NAYs: 50
Legislator Sort descending | State | Party | Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sen. Rick Scott | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Richard C. Shelby | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Kyrsten Sinema | ID ID | Yes | ||
Sen. Tina Smith | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Debbie Stabenow | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Dan Sullivan | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Jon Tester | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. John Thune | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Thom Tillis | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Patrick J. Toomey | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Tommy Tuberville | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Chris Van Hollen | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Mark Warner | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Raphael Warnock | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Elizabeth Warren | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Roger Wicker | Republican | No | ||
Sen. Ron Wyden | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Todd Young | Republican | No |