Score
Complete Vote History
Electronic Surveillance House
HR 5825 Electronic Surveillance (Passed 232 to 191 on 9/28/2006, Roll Call 502). Would allow electronic surveillance of communications with suspected terrorists without first obtaining approval from the secret FISA Court. See U.S. Const., amend. 4.
Military Tribunals House
Under this bill, a defendant's rights would be curtailed: he would be denied the right of habeas corpus; he could be detained indefinitely; and evidence obtained through coercion could be used against him--so long as the coercion falls outside the administration's definition of torture.
Under this bill, a defendant's rights would be curtailed: he would be denied the right of habeas corpus; he could be detained indefinitely; and evidence obtained through coercion could be used against him--so long as the coercion falls outside the administration's definition of torture.
Border Fence House
A border fence would help prevent illegal immigration and further protect our borders.
Gun Seizure House
HR 5013 Gun Seizure (Passed 322 to 99 on 7/25/2006, Roll Call 401). Would prohibit the confiscation of firearms in the wake of a natural disaster. See U.S. Const., amend. 2.
Oman Trade Agreement House
So-called free trade agreements damage the U.S. economy and threaten U.S. sovereignty by imposing international regulations.
Pledge Protection Act House
The Pledge of Allegiance should be protected from federal court activism.
Offshore Drilling House
The United States should reduce its dependency on foreign oil and utilize its own energy resources.
Line-Item Rescission House
This rescission bill, though not a full-fledged line-item veto, would still shift some legislative power from Congress to the president, disrupting the U.S. system of checks and balances.
Iran Military Operations House
The power to declare war belongs to Congress, not to the president, and such power should not be in the hands of one man.
Foreign Aid House
Foreign aid is unconstitutional and unworkable. Though foreign aid is supposed to help the poor and suffering in other countries, it instead has served to prop up economically deficient socialist regimes and to transfer wealth from American taxpayers to third-world elites.
Foreign aid is unconstitutional and unworkable. Though foreign aid is supposed to help the poor and suffering in other countries, it instead has served to prop up economically deficient socialist regimes and to transfer wealth from American taxpayers to third-world elites.
ANWR Oil and Gas Leasing House
The United States should reduce its dependency on foreign oil and develop its own energy resources.
Defunding the NAIS House
The NAIS would unconstitutionally allocate federal spending, place useless regulations on farmers, and threaten the privacy rights of American citizens.
Federal aid to farmers and federal food aid to individuals are not authorized by the Constitution.
Katrina Funding House
This amendment would have significantly cut unconstitutional federally funded disaster relief.
Even if the spending were constitutional, the funding should be voted on as part of the regular appropriations process and not introduced after the fact as "emergency" spending, ignoring fiscal responsibility.
As a matter of national sovereignty, American personnel must manage, maintain, and monitor our own sea ports.
Border Security House
HR 4437 Border Security (Passed 239 to 182 on 12/16/2005, Roll Call 661). Would authorize 700 miles of security fence to be built on the U.S.-Mexican border and make unlawful entry into the United States a criminal offense.
The Patriot Act tramples on the constitutionally protected rights of U.S. citizens.
This bill would provide an increase in spending, and social-welfare programs are unconstitutional.
Foreign Aid House
Foreign aid is unconstitutional.
Online Freedom of Speech House
This bill would protect free speech.
U.S. Treasury Borrowing House
Rep. Ron Paul's (R-TX) amendment to HR 1461 U.S. Treasury Borrowing (Rejected 47 to 371 on 10/26/2005, Roll Call 544). To "eliminate the ability of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to borrow from the Treasury." See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 8.
Rep. Ron Paul's (R-TX) amendment to HR 1461 U.S. Treasury Borrowing (Rejected 47 to 371 on 10/26/2005, Roll Call 544). To "eliminate the ability of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to borrow from the Treasury." See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 8.
Head Start Funding House
This bill would further federalize the educational system, and federal aid to education is unconstitutional.
Hate Crimes House
This legislation would further federalize the criminal code as well as punish not only criminal acts but the thoughts behind them.
Federally financing disaster relief is unconstitutional.
Surface Transportation House
This bill increases transportation spending and is fiscally irresponsible.
The Patriot Act tramples on the constitutionally protected rights of U.S. citizens.
Foreign Aid House
Foreign aid is unconstitutional.
This bill represents a significant increase in spending, and social-welfare programs are unconstitutional.
Mental Health Screening House
UN "Reforms." House
UN Dues Decrease House
WTO Withdrawal House
HJR 27 WTO Withdrawal (Rejected 86 to 338 on 6/9/2005, Roll Call 239). To withdraw the U.S. from the World Trade Organization (WTO).
HR 810 Embryonic Stem-Cell Research (Passed 238 to 194 on 5/24/2005, Roll Call 204). Would allow federal funds to be used for research on embryonic stem-cell lines, which can be created only by destroying human embryos (i.e., innocent human life).
Alaskan Drilling House
Pledge Protection Act House
Extending Tax Cuts House
Marriage Protection Act House
HR 3313 Marriage Protection Act (Passed 233 to 194 on 7/22/2004, Roll Call 410). Would protect marriage from judicial activism by restricting the federal courts as opposed to amending the Constitution.
Foreign Aid House
Continuity of Congress House
HR 2844 Continuity of Congress (Passed 306 to 97 on 4/22/2004, Roll Call 130). Would require special elections to be held within 45 days to fill vacant House seats in the extraordinary circumstance of more than 100 vacancies. See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 4.
HR 2844 Continuity of Congress (Passed 306 to 97 on 4/22/2004, Roll Call 130). Would require special elections to be held within 45 days to fill vacant House seats in the extraordinary circumstance of more than 100 vacancies. See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 4.
Surface Transportation House
HCR 393 Fiscal 2005 Budget Resolution (Passed 215 to 212 on 3/25/2004, Roll Call 92). Would establish broad spending and revenue targets over the next five years, for a total budget of $2.4 trillion. See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 8.
HR 1 Prescription Drug Benefit (Passed 220 to 215 on 11/22/2003, Roll Call 669). Would create a prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients. See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 8.
S 3 Partial-Birth Abortion Ban (Passed 281 to 142 on 10/2/2003, Roll Call 530). Would ban partial-birth abortions.
U.S.-Chile Trade House
Rejoining UNESCO House
Ban on UN Contributions House
Rep. Ron Paul's (R-TX) amendment to HR 1950 Ban on UN Contributions (Rejected 74 to 350 on 7/15/2003, Roll Call 364). Would prohibit funding for any U.S. contribution to the United Nations or any UN-affiliated agency.
Tax Reductions House
Unemployment Benefits House
Job Training House
Global AIDS Initiative House
Special Education House
Oil Consumption House
HJR 114 War Authorization Against Iraq (Passed 296 to 133 on 10/10/2002, Roll Call 455). Authorizes the use of U.S. military force against Iraq, including to enforce any related UN Security Council resolutions.
Homeland Security House
HR 4965 Partial-Birth Abortion Ban (Passed 274 to 151 on 7/24/2002, Roll Call 343). Would ban one type of abortion, known as partial-birth abortion.
Vietnam Trade House
Cuban Embargo House
Congressional Pay Raise House
Arming Commercial Pilots House
Prescription Drug Plan House
Debt Limit House
S 2578 Debt Limit (Passed 215 to 214 on 6/27/2002, Roll Call 279). Would increase the public debt limit by $450 billion for a new ceiling of $6.4 trillion. See U.S. Const., Art. 1, Sec. 8.
Pension Benefits House
Estate Tax Elimination House
Export-Import Bank House
Nuclear Waste House
Farm Bill House
Export-Import Bank House
Tax Cuts House
Illegal Aliens House
HR 1885 Illegal Aliens (Passed 275 to 137 on 3/12/2002, Roll Call 53). Would allow certain illegal immigrants to remain in this country while applying for legal residency.
Campaign Financing House
Asian Elephants House
Foreign Aid House
Education House
HR 1 Education (Passed 381 to 41 on 12/13/2001, Roll Call 497). Would, as the "No Child Left Behind Act," overhaul education proposals to increase school accountability and reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) for six years. See U.S. Const., amend. 10.
HR 1 Education (Passed 381 to 41 on 12/13/2001, Roll Call 497). Would, as the "No Child Left Behind Act," overhaul education proposals to increase school accountability and reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) for six years. See U.S. Const., amend. 10.
Elections House
Terrorism Insurance House
VA-HUD Appropriations House
NATO Expansion House
Aviation Security House
Economic Stimulus House
Anti-Terrorism Authority House
HR 3162 Anti-Terrorism Authority (Passed 357 to 66 on 10/24/2001, Roll Call 398). Would create the "USA Patriot Act," giving law enforcement and intelligence agencies vast new powers to combat terrorism. See U.S. Const., amend. 4.
