What Ann Kirkpatrick doesn't care about, or is just too busy to pay attention to:
2014:
June 25: The House passed HR 6 by a vote of 266-150 to streamline the export of liquefied natural gas. It also requires disclosure of the nation it is being shipped to. Ann did not vote on this.
June 21: The House passed HR 641 by a vote of 228-189 to streamline the process for issuing permits for oil and gas exploration on federal lands, expand the areas for exploration, and increase the amount of revenue shared with state and local governments. Even though this is projected to result on thousands of jobs, Ann did not vote on this measure.
June 20: The House passed the 2015 Military Appropriations Bill (HR 4870) by a vote of 340-73. The bill includes: a military pay raise; prevents the administration from transferring prisoners from Guantanamo Bay; funds an American built rocket so we don't have to rely on Russian RD-180; and funds legal assistance to members of the military who are sexually assaulted. How does Ann feel about any of this? Who knows. She didn't vote.
June 19: The House defeated an amendment to HR 4870 by a vote of 165-250 that would prohibit funds to be spent to redeploy troops in Iraq. Once again, Ann not not vote on this.
June 19: Ann did not vote on amendment to HR 4870 that would have diverted funds to the national guard to take care of thousands of unaccompanied child illegally here from Central America. Measure was defeated 130-292 without any input from Ann.
June 19: One more vote Ann did not take was on another amendment to HR 4870 to prevent the president from unilaterally closing nuclear missile locations.
2013:
May 17: The House passed HR 1060, the SEC Cost-Benefit Analysis Act, 235-161. This would require the SEC to change its rule-making procedures by conducting cost-benefit analyses before issuing new rules and two years after a rule takes effect. The bill would also require the agency to review existing rules and alter or repeal them if they are not working. Ann did not vote on this.
May 17: The House then defeated a democratic alternative to HR 1060 by a 165-233 vote. Incredibly, Ann didn't vote this time either!
June 25: The House passed HR 6 by a vote of 266-150 to streamline the export of liquefied natural gas. It also requires disclosure of the nation it is being shipped to. Ann did not vote on this.
June 21: The House passed HR 641 by a vote of 228-189 to streamline the process for issuing permits for oil and gas exploration on federal lands, expand the areas for exploration, and increase the amount of revenue shared with state and local governments. Even though this is projected to result on thousands of jobs, Ann did not vote on this measure.
June 20: The House passed the 2015 Military Appropriations Bill (HR 4870) by a vote of 340-73. The bill includes: a military pay raise; prevents the administration from transferring prisoners from Guantanamo Bay; funds an American built rocket so we don't have to rely on Russian RD-180; and funds legal assistance to members of the military who are sexually assaulted. How does Ann feel about any of this? Who knows. She didn't vote.
June 19: The House defeated an amendment to HR 4870 by a vote of 165-250 that would prohibit funds to be spent to redeploy troops in Iraq. Once again, Ann not not vote on this.
June 19: Ann did not vote on amendment to HR 4870 that would have diverted funds to the national guard to take care of thousands of unaccompanied child illegally here from Central America. Measure was defeated 130-292 without any input from Ann.
June 19: One more vote Ann did not take was on another amendment to HR 4870 to prevent the president from unilaterally closing nuclear missile locations.
2013:
May 17: The House passed HR 1060, the SEC Cost-Benefit Analysis Act, 235-161. This would require the SEC to change its rule-making procedures by conducting cost-benefit analyses before issuing new rules and two years after a rule takes effect. The bill would also require the agency to review existing rules and alter or repeal them if they are not working. Ann did not vote on this.
May 17: The House then defeated a democratic alternative to HR 1060 by a 165-233 vote. Incredibly, Ann didn't vote this time either!