Congress · 119th Congress
Senate passes spending package with Homeland Security punt
That move also came up short, with a motion to waive a budget point of order on the amendment defeated on a 47-52 vote.
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That move also came up short, with a motion to waive a budget point of order on the amendment defeated on a 47-52 vote.
Toomey pushed to amend the bill to keep the spending in the discretionary category, but his amendment was defeated in a 47-48 vote.
Polling in July by Co/efficient suggested the vote could be close, with 47 percent of likely primary voters in favor, 43 percent against and 10 percent still undecided.
Toomey’s amendment was rejected, 47-48, with Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, the sole GOP “no” vote.
Republican voters, like the representatives they send to Washington, are typically more hawkish — but more GOP respondents (47 percent) approve of the West’s decision against a no-fly zone than disapprove
Mike Lee, R-Utah, which would have denied funding to enforce any federal vaccine mandates, was shot down on a vote of 46-47.
Nine Senate and 47 House negotiators met publicly for the first time Wednesday to lay out their positions on how to proceed in reconciling House and Senate versions of the five-year legislation.
The imports were worth approximately $47 billion, according to the Census Bureau.
Senate Republicans rejected the amendment in a party-line vote, 47-51.