Environmental Funding

House Roll Call Vote 301

2004 Scorecard Vote

Pro-environment vote

Yes

Votes For

184

Votes Against

230

Not Voting

19

Issues

The ongoing protection of our natural resources depends as much on the robust funding of programs as on strong environmental laws. Unfortunately, the fiscal year 2005 budgets proposed by the Bush Administration and endorsed by Congressional leaders would put our nation’s air, land and water at risk by making substantial cuts to environmental programs. For example, the budget resolution reported by the House Budget Committee would have cut “discretionary” environmental spending (funding approved annually through the appropriations process) by $1.5 billion–nearly 5 percent below the previous year’s levels. Over a five-year period, the resolution would have cut environmental programs by 14 percent below the level needed to maintain the current level of activity. These proposed cuts–exceeding those proposed for most other domestic programs–would have forced crippling reductions in programs that reduce air and water pollution, promote sound science and safeguard our natural resources.

On March 25, 2004, the House narrowly approved H. Con. Res. 393 by a 215-212 vote (House roll call vote 92). NO is the pro-environment vote. Representative David Obey (D-WI) later offered a freestanding resolution, H. Res. 685, that would have, among other things, increased funding for natural resources and environment programs by $825 million. The increased spending would have been offset by reducing tax cuts for people with incomes over $1 million annually. On June 24, 2004, the House rejected the Obey resolution by a 184-230 vote (House roll call vote 301). YES is the pro-environment vote. The Senate did not approve the House-Senate conference report on the budget resolution.

The Bush Administration and its allies in Congress have also proposed using unbalanced PAYGO (pay-as-you-go) rules that require funding increases for entitlement programs (such as Medicare and Social Security) to be offset with cuts to other entitlements while not requiring that tax cuts be similarly offset with spending cuts. These proposed rules would exacerbate the budget deficit and put even greater pressure on environmental and other domestic funding priorities. By contrast, the bipartisan PAYGO rules that were in effect from 1990 to 2002 required spending offsets for both entitlement spending increases and tax cuts–a shared-sacrifice principle that proved vital in eliminating the deficit.

Representative Jim Nussle (R-IA), chair of the House Budget Committee, introduced the Spending Control Act of 2004, which would have implemented the unbalanced PAYGO rules through 2009 and set discretionary spending caps for the next five years. While the specific caps were not made public, the bill was designed to lock in cuts from the House budget resolution. The bill’s supporters introduced a revised version, H.R. 4663, that scaled back the duration of the caps from five to two years, but on June 25, 2004, the House rejected the bill by a 146-268 vote (House roll call vote 318). NO is the pro-environment vote.

Votes

Show
Show
Export data (CSV)
  • Pro-environment vote
  • Anti-environment Vote
  • Missed Vote
  • Excused
  • Not Applicable

Vote Key

Sort by
Alabama
2025 State Scorecard Average

26%

Alaska
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Arizona
2025 State Scorecard Average

33%

Arkansas
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

California
2025 State Scorecard Average

78%

Colorado
2025 State Scorecard Average

51%

Connecticut
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Delaware
2025 State Scorecard Average

100%

Florida
2025 State Scorecard Average

28%

Georgia
2025 State Scorecard Average

34%

Hawaii
2025 State Scorecard Average

98%

Idaho
2025 State Scorecard Average

2%

Illinois
2025 State Scorecard Average

81%

Indiana
2025 State Scorecard Average

22%

Iowa
2025 State Scorecard Average

2%

Kansas
2025 State Scorecard Average

23%

Kentucky
2025 State Scorecard Average

19%

Louisiana
2025 State Scorecard Average

38%

Maine
2025 State Scorecard Average

76%

Maryland
2025 State Scorecard Average

85%

Massachusetts
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Michigan
2025 State Scorecard Average

44%

Minnesota
2025 State Scorecard Average

50%

Mississippi
2025 State Scorecard Average

25%

Missouri
2025 State Scorecard Average

25%

Montana
2025 State Scorecard Average

2%

Nebraska
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Nevada
2025 State Scorecard Average

69%

New Hampshire
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

New Jersey
2025 State Scorecard Average

73%

New Mexico
2025 State Scorecard Average

93%

New York
2025 State Scorecard Average

72%

North Carolina
2025 State Scorecard Average

26%

North Dakota
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Ohio
2025 State Scorecard Average

33%

Oklahoma
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Oregon
2025 State Scorecard Average

82%

Pennsylvania
2025 State Scorecard Average

47%

Rhode Island
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

South Carolina
2025 State Scorecard Average

14%

South Dakota
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Tennessee
2025 State Scorecard Average

10%

Texas
2025 State Scorecard Average

31%

Utah
2025 State Scorecard Average

1%

Vermont
2025 State Scorecard Average

100%

Virginia
2025 State Scorecard Average

58%

Washington
2025 State Scorecard Average

75%

West Virginia
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Wisconsin
2025 State Scorecard Average

25%

Wyoming
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%