The House of Representatives on Thursday voted to advance a short-term funding extension to avoid a government shutdown, but Republicans were split on the legislation.
The continuing resolution, or CR, passed 314 to 108 with 107 GOP House members voting for it, and 106 Republicans opposing it.
You are viewing: Who Voted Against The Cr Bill Today
Congress has been passing CR to avoid a shutdown of government agencies since the end of September after failing to pass 12 annual spending bills for the 2024 fiscal year. Despite House Republicans voicing their disapproval of another CR, House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, pushed another one forward after it was passed by the Senate in a 77-18 vote earlier on Thursday.
The stopgap bill was passed before funding would have been cut off for agencies like the Veterans Affairs Department and Transportation Department on Friday. The rest of the government, including the Defense and State Departments, had a deadline of February 2.
Read more : Who is Billy Miller Dating Now?
The new CR will extend funding deadlines to March 1 and March 8.
The House Freedom Caucus has been wagering their support of legislation to avoid a government shutdown on their GOP colleagues’ approval of tougher immigration policies amid the surge in illegal migrant crossings at the southern border.
Hours before the Senate approved that stopgap bill, the Freedom Caucus asked Johnson to consider adding border security policies to it. In exchange, the Freedom Caucus would not try to stall a vote for the funding bill. But Johnson declined the deal.
The stopgap measure will be a temporary fix while Congress irons out some finer details of a $1.66 trillion appropriations deal that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Johnson agreed to earlier this month.
Read more : Who Won Mayor In Philadelphia
“This represents the most favorable budget agreement Republicans have achieved in over a decade,” Johnson wrote in a letter to his House GOP colleagues on January 7.
The stopgap bill will now go to President Joe Biden, who is expected to sign it into law.
Here’s a full list of the 106 House Republicans who voted against the stopgap bill:
- Mark Alford, Missouri
- Jodey Arrington, Texas
- Brian Babin, Texas
- James Baird, Indiana
- Jim Banks, Indiana
- Aaron Bean, Florida
- Jack Bergman, Michigan
- Andy Biggs, Arizona
- Gus Bilirakis, Florida
- Dan Bishop, North Carolina
- Lauren Boebert, Colorado
- Mike Bost, Illinois
- Josh Brecheen, Oklahoma
- Ken Buck, Colorado
- Tim Burchett, Tennessee
- Michael Burgess, Texas
- Eric Burlison, Missouri
- Kat Cammack, Florida
- Jerry Carl, Alabama
- Ben Cline, Virginia
- Michael Cloud, Texas
- Andrew Clyde, Georgia
- Mike Collins, Georgia
- Elijah Crane, Arizona
- John Curtis, Utah
- Warren Davidson, Ohio
- Byron Donalds, Florida
- Jeff Duncan, South Carolina
- Neal Dunn, Florida
- Ron Estes, Kansas
- Mike Ezell, Mississippi
- Pat Fallon, Texas
- Brad Finstad, Minnesota
- Michelle Fischbach, Minnesota
- Scott Fitzgerald, Wisconsin
- Scott Franklin, Florida
- Russell Fry, South Carolina
- Matt Gaetz, Florida
- Mike Gallagher, Wisconsin
- Tony Gonzales, Texas
- Bob Good, Virginia
- Lance Gooden, Texas
- Paul Gosar, Arizona
- Mark Green, Tennessee
- Marjorie Taylor Greene, Georgia
- H. Morgan Griffith, Virginia
- Glenn Grothman, Wisconsin
- Michael Guest, Mississippi
- Harriet Hageman, Wyoming
- Andy Harris, Maryland
- Diana Harshbarger, Tennessee
- Kevin Hern, Oklahoma
- Clay Higgins, Louisianna
- Erin Houchin, Indiana
- Wesley Hunt, Texas
- Ronny Jackson, Texas
- Jim Jordan, Ohio
- John Joyce, Pennsylvania
- Trent Kelly, Mississippi
- Darin LaHood, Illinois
- Debbie Lesko, Arizona
- Barry Loudermilk, Georgia
- Anna Paulina Luna, Florida
- Morgan Luttrell, Texas
- Nancy Mace, South Carolina
- Celeste Maloy, Utah
- Tracey Mann, Kansas
- Thomas Massie, Kentucky
- Brian Mast, Florida
- Tom McClintock, California
- Richard McCormick, Georgia,
- Mary Miller, Illinois
- Max Miller, Ohio
- Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Iowa
- Cory Mills, Florida
- Alexander Mooney, West Virginia
- Barry Moore, Alabama
- Nathaniel Moran, Texas
- Troy Nehls, Texas
- Ralph Norman, South Carolina
- Jay Obernolte, California
- Gary Palmer, Alabama
- Scott Perry, Pennsylvania
- August Pfluger, Texas
- Bill Posey, Florida
- John Rose, Tennessee
- Matthew Rosendale, Montana
- Chip Roy, Texas
- David Schweikert, Arizona
- Keith Self, Texas
- Pete Sessions, Texas
- Victoria Spartz, Indiana
- Pete Stauber, Montana
- Elise Stefanik, New York
- Bryan Steil, Wisconsin
- W. Gregory Steube, Florida
- Thomas Tiffany, Wisconsin
- William Timmons, South Carolina
- Jefferson Van Drew, New Jersey
- Beth Van Duyne, Texas
- Derrick Van Orden, Wisconsin
- Randy Weber, Texas
- Daniel Webster, Florida
- Bruce Westerman, Arkansas
- Roger Williams, Texas
- Rudy Yakym, Indiana
“);jQuery(this).remove()}) jQuery(‘.start-slider’).owlCarousel({loop:!1,margin:10,nav:!0,items:1}).on(‘changed.owl.carousel’,function(event){var currentItem=event.item.index;var totalItems=event.item.count;if(currentItem===0){jQuery(‘.owl-prev’).addClass(‘disabled’)}else{jQuery(‘.owl-prev’).removeClass(‘disabled’)} if(currentItem===totalItems-1){jQuery(‘.owl-next’).addClass(‘disabled’)}else{jQuery(‘.owl-next’).removeClass(‘disabled’)}})}})})
Source: https://t-tees.com
Category: WHO