2017: Fitzpatrick Voted Against The FY 2018 Republican Study Committee
Budget Resolution Which In Part Called For Eliminating The National
Endowment For The Humanities. In October 2017, Fitzpatrick voted
against a budget resolution that would in part, according to
Congressional Quarterly, "provide for $2.9 trillion in new budget
authority in fiscal 2018. It would balance the budget by fiscal 2023 by
reducing spending by $10.1 trillion over 10 years. It would cap total
discretionary spending at $1.06 trillion for fiscal 2018 and would
assume no separate Overseas Contingency Operations funding for fiscal
2018 or subsequent years and would incorporate funding related to war or
terror into the base defense account. It would assume repeal of the 2010
health care overhaul and would convert Medicaid and the Children's
Health Insurance Program into a single block grant program. It would
require that off budget programs, such as Social Security, the U.S.
Postal Service, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, be included in the
budget." The underlying legislation was an FY 2018 House GOP budget
resolution. The House rejected the RSC budget by a vote of 139 to 281.
[House Vote 555,
10/5/17; Congressional
Quarterly, 10/5/17; Congressional
Actions, H. Amdt.
455;
Congressional Actions, H. Con. Res.
71]
2024: Fitzpatrick Voted Against Reducing Funding For The National
Endowment For The Humanities By $48.9 Million. In July 2024,
Fitzpatrick voted against , according to Congressional Quarterly,
"amendment no. 23 that would reduce funding for the National Endowment
for the Humanities by $48.9 million and transfer the same amount to the
spending reduction account." The vote was on the amendment. The
underlying legislation was the FY 2025 Interior-Environment
appropriations. The House rejected the amendment by a vote of 147 to
269. [House Vote 386,
7/23/24; Congressional
Quarterly, 7/23/24;
Congressional Actions,
H.Amdt.1143;
Congressional Actions, H.R.
8998]