Notes To The Guide
Candidates are listed in alphabetical order, by district. Party affiliation
is noted R (Republican), D (Democrat) or I (Independent). Because of space
limitations, only major-party candidates are profiled, and biographical
information is necessarily selective. Political-career entries reflect
elective offices only and have been edited for space. NR (no response)
indicates that a candidate chose not to answer a question. Some photographs
of candidates were not available at press time.
The Issues
From among hundreds of votes taken in Congress in 1994 and 1995,
Congressional Quarterly selected 11 on which to poll candidates.
Incumbents' responses are based on actual votes. Challengers were asked by
questionnaire how they would have voted on each. Those questions (and the
congressional votes they are based on) are presented below. Unless
otherwise noted, all votes took place in 1995. An asterisk following a
response indicates that an incumbent changed his or her vote on a similar
bill this past summer.
Budget House and Senate: Would you have voted
for the budget-reconciliation bill aimed at balancing the federal budget by
fiscal year 2002? The bill had provisions reducing expected federal
spending $894 billion over seven years, including major restraints on
Medicare, Medicaid and welfare spending, and cutting expected tax revenue
$245 billion. [H/S: HR2491. Passed, H vote: 237-189; S vote: 52-47]
Medicare House: Would you have voted for the
bill to reduce expected Medicare spending $270 billion over seven years?
[H: HR2425. Passed, H vote: 231-201] Senate: Would you have voted for the
amendment to limit the seven-year reduction in expected Medicare spending
to $89 billion rather than the $270 billion cut in the bill? [S: S1357.
Defeated, S vote: 46-53]
Defense House: Would you have voted for the
amendment to cut $493 million provided for continued production of the B-2
Stealth bombers. [H: HR2126. Rejected, H vote: 210-213] Senate: Would you
have voted for the fiscal 1996 defense-spending bill requesting $6.4
billion more than Clinton asked for? [S: S1087. Passed, S vote: 62-35]
Abortion House: Would you have voted for the
bill to ban so-called partial-birth abortions, in which the doctor removes
the fetus' brain tissue after bringing the fetus into the birth canal?
Under the bill, doctors who perform the procedure could be subject to
criminal and civil penalties. [H: HR1833. Passed, H vote: 288-139] Senate:
Would you have voted for the amendment to a bill prescribing criminal and
civil penalties for doctors who perform so-called partial-birth abortions?
The amendment would have provided legal protections for doctors who used
the procedure to protect the life or health of the pregnant woman. [S:
Amendment to HR1833. Rejected, S vote: 47-51]
Guns House and Senate: Would you have voted for
the "Brady Bill," which requires each would-be purchaser of a handgun to
wait five days while local law-enforcement officials conduct a personal
background check on the purchaser? [HR1025, 1993, 103d Congress. Passed, H
vote: 238-189; S vote: 63-36]
Gays House and Senate: Would you have voted for
the amendment to allow the Pentagon to implement its "don't ask, don't
tell" policy, continuing the existing ban on known homosexuals in the
military, but preventing military officials from asking about service
members' sexual orientation? [H: HR2401. Passed, H vote: 295-133. S: S1298.
Rejected, S vote: 33-63. Both bills 1993, 103d Congress]
Bosnia House and Senate: Would you have voted
for a bill to bar the use of federal money for the deployment of U.S.
troops in Bosnia-Herzegovina? [H: HR2770. Rejected, H vote: 210-218. S:
HR2606. Rejected, S vote: 22-77]
NAFTA House and Senate: Would you have voted
for legislation to implement the North American Free Trade Agreement, which
links the United States, Canada and Mexico in a free-trade zone and
requires each country to eliminate numerous tariffs and trade barriers?
[H/S: HR3450, 1993, 103d Congress. Passed, H vote: 234-200; S vote: 61-38]
Welfare House: Would you have voted for the
bill overhauling the federal welfare system, ending welfare as an
entitlement, turning it into a block-grant program to be run by states and
placing certain work and behavioral requirements on welfare recipients?
[HR4. Passed, H vote: 234-199] Senate: Would you have voted for a
Democratic alternative to the Republican (House) welfare-overhaul bill? It
would continue welfare as a federal entitlement rather than converting it
into a block-grant program to be run by the states, and provide more money
than was in the g.o.p. bill for job assistance and child care. [S: HR4.
Rejected, S vote: 41-56]
Medical Leave House only: Would you have voted
for the Family and Medical Leave Act, which requires many businesses to
provide workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for the birth or adoption of
a child or a medical emergency? [HR1, 1993, 103d Congress. Passed, H vote:
265-163]
National Service Corps Senate only: Would you
have voted for a bill creating a National Service Corps to provide federal
financial aid to young people in exchange for their participation in
designated community-service activities? [HR2010. Passed, S: 58-41]
How To Find Your Representative
Project Vote Smart, a nonprofit and nonpartisan group based in Oregon,
provides information about local and national candidates at 1-800-622-SMART
(7627). Congressional Quarterly offers similar services at
voter96.cqalert.com/cq_rate.htm.
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