Vote Sheet II – September 27, 2023
Correa (D-CA) – Amendment No. 13 – Decreases and increases the funding for CBP Operations and Support by $496 million to allow CBP to use these funds to hire additional CBP Officers for ports of entry, in addition to new U.S. Border Patrol Agents
Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) – Amendment No. 23 – Strikes Sections 213 (funding prohibition on the U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP One Application), 214 (funding prohibition to reduce participation in or substantively diminish the delegation of law enforcement authority under section 287(g) of the INA), 220 (funding prohibition on Guidelines for the Enforcement of Civil Immigration Law and Guidance to OPLA Attorneys Regarding the Enforcement of Civil Immigration Laws and the Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion), 221 (funding prohibition on transport of aliens unlawfully present in, paroled into, or inadmissible to the U.S. into the interior of the U.S.), 224 (requires DHS secretary to prioritize detention to ensure that the average daily population of detainees is maintained at the full capacity funded and ensure that every alien on the non-detained docket is enrolled into the Alternatives to Detention Program with mandatory GPS monitoring), 404 (funding prohibition for ‘‘Procedures or Credible Fear Screening and Consideration of Asylum, Withholding of Removal, and CAT Protection Claims by Asylum Officers’’ rule), 405 (funding prohibition on issuing any employment authorization document to any alien whose application for asylum has been denied, or who is convicted of a Federal or State crime while their application is pending), 544 (funding prohibition on ‘‘Circumvention of Lawful Pathways’’ rule), 549 (funding prohibition to execute an inspection of any detention facility within six months of a previous inspection) and 550 (funding prohibition to execute an inspection of any detention facility except solely for compliance with the terms, conditions, and standards found within the National Detention Standards 2019 for ICE)
Escobar (D-TX) – Amendment No. 25 – Strikes Section 224 of the bill (requires DHS secretary to prioritize detention to ensure that the average daily population of detainees is maintained at the full capacity funded and ensure that every alien on the non-detained docket is enrolled into the Alternatives to Detention Program with mandatory GPS monitoring)
Clyde (R-GA) – Amendment No. 29 – Reduces funding for CISA by 25%
Biggs (R-AZ) – Amendment No. 39 – Prohibits the use of funds to pay the salary and expenses of CISA Director Jen Easterly
Biggs (R-AZ) – Amendment No. 40 – Prohibits the use of funds to pay the salary and expenses of CISA Director of Election Security Initiative Geoffrey Hale
Biggs (R-AZ) – Amendment No. 41 – Prohibits the use of funds to pay the salary and expenses of DHS Under Secretary for the Office of Strategy, Policy, and Plans Robert Silvers
Biggs (R-AZ) – Amendment No. 42 – Prohibits the use of funds to pay the salary and expenses of DHS Assistant Secretary for Counter Terrorism and Threat Prevention Samantha Vinograd
Biggs (R-AZ) – Amendment No. 43 – Prohibits the use of funds to pay the salary and expenses of DHS Director of Departmental GAO-OIG Liaison Office Jim Crumpacker
Boebert (R-CO) – Amendment No. 48 – Decreases Kenneth L Wainstein, Secretary of Homeland Security for Intelligence and Analysis salary to $1
Boebert (R-CO) – Amendment No. 49 – Reduces the salary of Claire Trickler-McNulty, Assistant Director, ICE Office of Program Evaluation, to $1
Boebert (R-CO) – Amendment No. 50 – Decreases the salary of head of the CRCL office, Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia, to $1
Castro (D-TX) – Amendment No. 51 – Prohibits use of federal funds to support Operation Lone Star
Nehls (R-TX) – Amendment No. 64 – Prohibits funds from this bill to be used for the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties of the Department of Homeland Security