The U.S. Congress Votes Database

103rd Congress / Bills / H R 4426

Title

An Act making appropriations for foreign operations, export financing, and related programs for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1995, and for other purposes.

Read more information on this bill at the Library of Congress.

Categories (What are categories?)

Abortion | Acquired immune deficiency syndrome | Actions and defenses | Administration of justice -- Caribbean area | Administrative procedure | Aggression | Agricultural surpluses | Agriculture | Agriculture in foreign trade | Alcoholic beverages | American economic assistance -- Gaza Strip | American investments | American military assistance -- Egypt | American military assistance -- Laos | American technical assistance | Americans in foreign countries | Amusement parks | Antiaircraft missiles -- Persian Gulf States | Antitank weapons | Appropriations -- African Development Foundation | Appropriations -- Department of State | Appropriations -- Export-Import Bank of the United States | Appropriations -- Inter-American Foundation | Appropriations -- International Dev. Coop. Agency | Appropriations -- Overseas Private Investment Corporation | Appropriations -- Peace Corps | Armed forces -- Thailand | Armed forces abroad | Arms control | Arms control agreements | Arms sales -- Greece | Arms sales -- Turkey | Auditing | Biological weapons | Birth control -- China | Black colleges | Bombings -- Scotland | Budgets | Business | Buy American | Charities | Chemical weapons | Children | Civil service pensions | Civil war | Civil-military relations | Clinics | Collective security | Collective security agreements -- Slovakia | Commercial aircraft | Commercial arbitration | Commercial blacklisting -- Arab countries--Israel | Communications | Communist countries | Congress | Congress and foreign policy | Congressional investigations | Congressional oversight | Congressional reporting requirements | Congressional-Presidential relations | Conservation of natural resources | Correctional institutions | Counterterrorism | Coups d'etat | Crime prevention | Criminal investigation | Criminal justice | Criminal justice information | Cultural relations | Debt agreements | Debt relief | Debt-for-nature swaps | Defense budgets | Defense economics | Defense policy | Democracy | Developing countries | Diplomacy | Diplomats | Disaster relief | Drug abuse | Drug law enforcement | Due process of law -- New Jersey | Economic development | Economic growth | Economic policy | Education | Educational exchanges -- Central Europe | Educational policy | Embargo -- Bosnia and Herzegovina | Emergency management | Emergency medical services | Emigration | Employee rights | Energy | Energy policy | Environmental assessment | Environmental protection | Ethnic groups | Ethnic relations | European American ethnic groups | Evacuation of civilians | Evidence (Law) | Exchange of persons programs | Executive compensation | Executive departments | Executive reorganization -- Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission | Export controls | Export credit | Export finance | Expropriation | Extradition -- Jordan | Farm produce | Federal advisory bodies | Federally-guaranteed loans | Finance | Fines (Penalties) -- District of Columbia | Food | Food relief | Foreign aid -- Afghanistan | Foreign aid -- Africa | Foreign aid -- Africa (Sub-Saharan) | Foreign aid -- Albania | Foreign aid -- Algeria | Foreign aid -- Armenia | Foreign aid -- Asia | Foreign aid -- Belarus | Foreign aid -- Bolivia | Foreign aid -- Central Asia | Foreign aid -- CIS countries | Foreign aid -- Colombia | Foreign aid -- Croatia | Foreign aid -- Cuba | Foreign aid -- Czech Republic | Foreign aid -- Dominican Republic | Foreign aid -- East Asia | Foreign aid -- Eastern Europe | Foreign aid -- El Salvador | Foreign aid -- Estonia | Foreign aid -- Europe | Foreign aid -- Georgia (Republic) | Foreign aid -- Guatemala | Foreign aid -- Haiti | Foreign aid -- Hungary | Foreign aid -- Indonesia | Foreign aid -- Iraq | Foreign aid -- Kazakhstan | Foreign aid -- Kirghizia | Foreign aid -- Latin America | Foreign aid -- Latvia | Foreign aid -- Lebanon | Foreign aid -- Liberia | Foreign aid -- Libya | Foreign aid -- Lithuania | Foreign aid -- Malawi | Foreign aid -- Middle East and North Africa | Foreign aid -- Moldova | Foreign aid -- Mongolia | Foreign aid -- Nicaragua | Foreign aid -- North Korea | Foreign aid -- Pakistan | Foreign aid -- Peru | Foreign aid -- Poland | Foreign aid -- Romania | Foreign aid -- Russia | Foreign aid -- Russian Republic | Foreign aid -- Rwanda | Foreign aid -- South Asia | Foreign aid -- Sudan | Foreign aid -- Syria | Foreign aid -- Tajikistan | Foreign aid -- Ukraine | Foreign aid -- Vietnam | Foreign aid -- Zaire | Foreign exchange | Foreign investments | Foreign loans -- Iran | Foreign policy -- Israel | Foreign relations | Foreign relations -- Ireland--Gt. Brit. | Foreign service | Foreign trade | Forest clearcutting | Forest conservation | Free enterprise | Free ports and zones | Fringe benefits | Fugitives from justice | Genocide | Global warming | Government and business | Government consultants | Government contractors -- West Bank | Government corporations | Government employees | Government information | Government lending | Government liability (International law) | Government procurement | Government securities | Government service contracts | Government spending reductions | Government trust funds | Government vehicles | Haitians | Hazardous substances | Health education | Higher education | Hispanic Americans | History | Hospitals | Housing | Housing finance | Human rights | Human rights -- Cyprus | Humanities | Illegal aliens | Immigration | Import restrictions | Imports | Indigenous peoples | Infant mortality | Inspection (Arms control) | Inspectors general | Insurance companies | Insurgency -- Cambodia | Interest rates | International affairs | International agencies | International competitiveness | International cooperation | International courts | International environmental cooperation | International finance | International military forces | International monetary system | International relief | Investment guaranty insurance | Investment of public funds | Job training | Kidnapping | Labor | Land mines | Law | Law enforcement -- Equipment and supplies | Leases | Licenses | Location of industries | Manufacturing industries | Marine insurance | Mass destruction weapons | Maternal health services | Medical care | Medical instruments and apparatus | Medicine | Military agreements | Military aircraft | Military airlift | Military and naval supplies | Military assistance | Military communications | Military education | Military intervention | Military occupation | Military readiness | Military strategy | Military training | Military weapons | Mines and mineral resources | Minesweeping | Minorities | Minority business enterprises | Minority education | Minority employment | Missing in action | Money | Multilateral development banks | Murder | Narcotic traffic | NATO countries | NATO military forces | Natural resources | Negotiations | Nongovernmental organizations | Nuclear exports | Nuclear fuels | Nuclear nonproliferation | Nutrition | Organized crime | Palestinians | Parking facilities | Parliamentary government | Peace -- Middle East | Peace negotiations -- Northern Ireland | Peace treaties | Pensions | Plant shutdowns | Plutonium | Police training -- Panama | Politics and government | Poor | Population policy | Poverty | Pregnant women | Presidents | Prison overcrowding | Prisoners | Prisoners of war | Prisons | Privatization | Produce trade | Prosecution | Public contracts | Public debt | Recognition (International law) | Recreation -- Fees | Refrigeration | Refugee policy | Refugees -- Burma | Refugees -- Kuwait | Refugees -- Myanmar | Rehabilitation of criminals | Reparations | Reprogramming of appropriated funds | Research and development | Salaries | Sanctions (International law) -- Montenegro | Sanctions (International law) -- Serbia | Scholarships | Science policy | Slavic Americans | Small business | Social services | Socially handicapped | Sovereignty | Sports | State-sponsored terrorism | Sterilization (Birth control) | Strategic materials -- South Korea | Supplemental appropriations | Surplus government property | Sustainable development | Technology | Technology transfer | Telecommunication | Telecommunication industry | Terrorism | Terrorists | Third World | Trade | Transportation | Treaties | Tropical forests | Unemployment | United Nations | United Nations delegations -- Germany | United Nations delegations -- Japan | United Nations economic assistance | United Nations finances | United Nations membership | United Nations structure | Uranium | Vaccination | Victims of terrorism | Vietnamese Conflict | Volunteer workers | War crime trials | War crimes -- Yugoslavia | War relief | Weapons systems | Women | World health

Votes on this bill

DateChamberResultVote
8/10/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 271: On the Conference Report
h.r.4426 conference report; Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1994
8/4/94 House Passed Session 2, roll call 376: On Agreeing to the Conference Report
Foreign Operations Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1995
7/15/94 Senate Passed Session 2, roll call 203: On Passage of the Bill
H.R. 4426, as amended; Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1994
7/15/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 202: On the Amendment
Helms Amdt. No. 2281; To limit assistance to the Government of Colombia unless the President certifies that it is fully cooperating in counternarcotics efforts.
7/15/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 201: On the Amendment
Domenici Amdt. No. 2284 (As Mod.); To allow the President to use Russian aid funds in this bill for the Nunn-Lugar cooperative threat reduction program.
7/15/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 200: On the Amendment
Dole Amdt. No. 2273; To restrict the use of available funds to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea until the President certifies and reports to Congress that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea does not possess nuclear weapons, has halted its nuclear weapons program, and has not exported weapons-grade plutonium.
7/15/94 Senate Rejected Session 2, roll call 199: On the Amendment
Nickles Amdt. No. 2275; To increase the amount appropriated for international narcotics control and to decrease the amounts appropriated for contribution to the Global Environmental Facility and for contribution to the International Development Association.
7/14/94 Senate Rejected Session 2, roll call 198: On the Amendment
helms amdt no. 2254; To prohibit the availability of funds for the United Nations Development Program.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 197: On the Amendment
bumpers amdt no. 2294; To delete funding for parliamentary training and democracy in the People's Republic of China.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 196: On the Amendment
brown amdt no. 2248; To make Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic eligible for allied defense cooperation with NATO countries, and for other purposes.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 195: On the Motion to Table
motion to table mcconnell amdt no. 2266, as mod; To require a report on NATO eligibility criteria.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 194: On the Motion to Table
Motion to Table Dole Amdt. No. 2245; To establish a congressional commission for the purpose of assessing the humanitarian, political, and diplomatic conditions in Haiti and reporting to the Congress on the appropriate policy options available to the United States with respect to Haiti.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 193: On the Amendment
McConnell Amdt. No. 2263; To provide funds to the International Criminal Investigative Training Assistance Program to undertake a police development and training program of Russian police agencies.
7/14/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 192: On the Amendment
D'Amato Amdt. No. 2264; To provide the Federal Bureau of Investigation with $15,000,000 to be earmarked for international law enforcement cooperation with the New Independent States and Eastern Europe.
7/14/94 Senate Rejected Session 2, roll call 191: On the Amendment
Helms Amdt. No. 2253; To prohibit U.S. Government intervention with respect to abortion laws or policies in foreign countries.
7/13/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 190: On the Amendment
Mcconnell amdt. no. 2240; To establish the date of Russian troop withdrawal from the Baltics.
6/29/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 174: On the Motion to Table
M to T Comm. Amdt. beginning on page 34, line 19 thru 25; Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1994
6/29/94 Senate Agreed to Session 2, roll call 173: On the Amendment
Mitchell Amdt. No. 2118; Expressing the sense of the Congress with respect to Haiti.
6/29/94 Senate Rejected Session 2, roll call 172: On the Amendment
GREGG AMDT NO. 2117; To reflect the sense of the Senate relative to military operations in Haiti unless certain conditions are met.
6/29/94 Senate Rejected Session 2, roll call 171: On the Amendment
Helms Amdt. No. 2112; To eliminate the appropriations proposed to be made for fiscal year 1995 for the International Development Association.
5/25/94 House Passed Session 2, roll call 208: On Passage
Foreign Operations Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1995
5/25/94 House Failed Session 2, roll call 207: On Agreeing to the Amendment
5/25/94 House Failed Session 2, roll call 206: On Agreeing to the Amendment
5/25/94 House Failed Session 2, roll call 205: On Agreeing to the Amendment
5/25/94 House Agreed to Session 2, roll call 204: On Agreeing to the Amendment
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