111th Congress / Bills / S CON RES 13
Title
An original concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010, revising the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal year 2009, and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2011 through 2014.
Read more information on this bill at the Library of Congress.
Votes on this bill
| Date | Chamber | Result | Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 173: On the Conference Report Conference Report to Accompany S. Con. Res. 13; An original concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010, revising the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal year 2009, and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2011 through 2014. | ||
| House | Session 1, roll call 216: On Agreeing to the Conference Report Congressional Budget for Fiscal Year 2010 | ||
| House | Session 1, roll call 198: On Motion to Instruct Conferees Congressional Budget for Fiscal Year 2010 | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 154: On the Concurrent Resolution S. Con. Res. 13 as Amended; An original concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010, revising the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal year 2009, and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2011 through 2014. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 153: On the Amendment Vitter Amdt. No. 937; To require States to implement drug testing programs for applicants for and recipients of assistance under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, which would encourage healthy, drug-free families instead of encouraging dependent behavior or on-going drug abuse. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 152: On the Amendment Coburn Amdt. No. 828; To protect the freedom of conscience for patients and the right of health care providers to serve patients without violating their moral and religious convictions. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 151: On the Amendment DeMint Amdt. No. 964; To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect small and home businesses from the burdensome and impractical requirements of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 148: On the Amendment DeMint Amdt. No. 965; To prevent taxpayer-funded bailouts for auto manufacturers. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 147: On the Amendment Durbin Amdt. No. 974, As Modified; To provide that no additional estate tax relief beyone that which is already assumed in this resolution, which protects over 99.7 percent of estates from the estate tax, shall be allowed under any deficit-neutral reserve fund unless an equal amount of aggregate tax relief is also provided to Americans earning less than $100,000 per year. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 146: On the Amendment Lincoln Amdt. No. 873; To create a deficit-neutral reserve fund for estate tax relief. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 143: On the Amendment Bennett Amdt. No. 954, As Modified; To save the American taxpayer over $150,000,000,000 by adjusting spending levels beyond fiscal year 2010 to compensate for spending from the stimulus bill in the corresponding fiscal years. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 142: On the Amendment Bond Amdt. No. 926; To protect workers from significant job loss by providing a point of order against climate change or similar legislation that raises Federal revenues to such an extent that it causes significant job loss in manufacturing- or coal-dependent U.S. regions such as the Midwest, Great Plains or South. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 141: On the Amendment Stabenow Amdt. No. 879; To modify the authorization for climate change legislation. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 140: On the Amendment Sanders Amdt. No. 811; To provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to establish a national usury law, and for other purposes. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 139: On the Amendment Grassley Amdt. No. 950; To ensure that millions of middle-income families do not face an alternative minimum tax increase in 2013 and 2014 and that the budget resolution reflects that result. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 137: On the Amendment Boxer Amdt. No. 953, as Modified; To add a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the 21st Century Community Learning Centers afterschool program. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 138: On the Amendment Thune Amdt. No. 803; To protect charitable giving by ensuring that organizations that provide important religious, educational, cultural, health care, and environmental services are not negatively impacted by changes to the Federal income tax deduction for charitable donations. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 136: On the Amendment Landrieu Amdt. No. 931; To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for outer Continental Shelf oil and natural gas leasing revenues. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 135: On the Amendment Graham Amdt. No. 910; To protect middle-income taxpayers from a national energy tax. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 134: On the Amendment Vitter Amdt. No. 787; To end $272 billion in spending on bailouts under TARP and reduce record deficits and levels of debt. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 133: On the Amendment Reed Amdt. No. 949; To provide for the expenditure of the remaining Troubled Asset Relief Program funds for the benefit of consumers. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 132: On the Motion to Recommit Johanns Motion to Recommit to the Committee on the Budget; An original concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010, revising the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal year 2009, and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2011 through 2014. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 131: On the Amendment Sanders Amdt. No. 875; To require information from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System about the use of emergency economic assistance. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 130: On the Amendment Dodd Amdt. No. 913; To provide for enhanced oversight of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System concerning the use of emergency economic assistance. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 129: On the Amendment McCain Amdt. No. 882, as Modified; In the nature of a substitute. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 128: On the Amendment Ensign Amdt. No. 805; To require certain higher-income beneficiaries enrolled in the Medicare prescription drug benefit to pay higher premiums, as is currently required for physicians' services and outpatient services, and as proposed in the budget of the United States Government most recently submitted by the President. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 127: On the Amendment Kyl Amdt. No. 793; To protect all patients by prohibiting the use of data obtained from comparative effectiveness research to deny coverage of items or services under Federal health care programs and to ensure that comparative effectiveness research accounts for advancements in genomics and personalized medicine, the unique needs of health disparity populations, and differences in the treatment response and the treatment preferences of patients. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 126: On the Amendment Johanns Amdt. No. 735; To prohibit the use of reconciliation in the Senate for climate change legislation involving a cap and trade system. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 124: On the Amendment Crapo Amdt. No. 844; To protect the fiscal discipline on discretionary spending exercised by the reported budget resolution by extending the resolution's discretionary spending limits to exactly the same level as already assumed in the resolution to make sure that debt is not increased further than contemplated by this budget resolution as a result of subsequent budget resolution or appropriation bills. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 123: On the Amendment Gregg Amdt. No. 835; To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to address our Nations long term fiscal problems. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 122: On the Amendment Cornyn Amdt. No. 806; To protect small businesses from higher taxes. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 121: On the Amendment Ensign Amdt. No. 804; To protect middle-income taxpayers from tax increases by providing a point of order against legislation that increase taxes on them, including taxes that arise, directly or indirectly, from Federal revenues derived from climate change or similar legislation. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 120: On the Amendment Sessions Amdt. No. 772, As Modified; To restore the budget discipline of the Federal Government by freezing nondefense discretionary spending for fiscal years 2010 and 2011, and limiting the growth of nondefense discretionary spending to one percent annually for fiscal years 2012, 2013, and 2014. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 119: On the Amendment Alexander Amdt. No. 747; To create runaway debt point of order against consideration of a budget resolution that projects the ratio of public debt to GDP for any fiscal year in excess of 90% to ensure the continued viability of US dollar and prevent doubling or tripling the debt burden on future generations. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 118: On the Amendment Gregg Amdt. No. 739; To prohibit the consideration of any budget resolution, or amendment thereto, or conference report thereon, that shows an increase in the public debt, for the period of the current fiscal year through the next 10 years, equal to or greater than the debt accumulated from 1789 to January 20, 2009. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 117: On the Amendment Thune Amdt. No. 731; To amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund for climate change legislation to require that such legislation does not increase electricity or gasoline prices. | ||
| Senate | Session 1, roll call 116: On the Amendment Boxer Amdt. No. 749; To require that certain legislation relating to clean energy technologies not increase electricity or gasoline prices or increase the overall burden on consumers. |
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