CONGRESSIONAL RECORD—SENATE October 5, 2005 EC–4150
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One Hundred Third Congress January 3, 1993 to January 3, 1995
ONE HUNDRED THIRD CONGRESS JANUARY 3, 1993 TO JANUARY 3, 1995 FIRST SESSION—January 5, 1993, 1 to November 26, 1993 SECOND SESSION—January 25, 1994, 2 to December 1, 1994 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—J. DANFORTH QUAYLE, 3 of Indiana; ALBERT A. GORE, JR., 4 of Tennessee PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—ROBERT C. BYRD, of West Virginia SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—WALTER J. STEWART, 5 of Washington, D.C.; MARTHA S. POPE, 6 of Connecticut SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—MARTHA S. POPE, 7 of Connecticut; ROBERT L. BENOIT, 6 of Maine SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—THOMAS S. FOLEY, 8 of Washington CLERK OF THE HOUSE—DONNALD K. ANDERSON, 8 of California SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—WERNER W. BRANDT, 8 of New York DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—JAMES T. MALLOY, 8 of New York DIRECTOR OF NON-LEGISLATIVE AND FINANCIAL SERVICES—LEONARD P. WISHART III, 9 of New Jersey ALABAMA Ed Pastor, Phoenix Lynn Woolsey, Petaluma SENATORS Bob Stump, Tolleson George Miller, Martinez Nancy Pelosi, San Francisco Howell T. Heflin, Tuscumbia Jon Kyl, Phoenix Ronald V. Dellums, Oakland Richard C. Shelby, Tuscaloosa Jim Kolbe, Tucson Karen English, Flagstaff Bill Baker, Walnut Creek REPRESENTATIVES Richard W. Pombo, Tracy Sonny Callahan, Mobile ARKANSAS Tom Lantos, San Mateo Terry Everett, Enterprise SENATORS Fortney Pete Stark, Hayward Glen Browder, Jacksonville Anna G. Eshoo, Atherton Tom Bevill, Jasper Dale Bumpers, Charleston Norman Y. Mineta, San Jose Bud Cramer, Huntsville David H. Pryor, Little Rock Don Edwards, San Jose Spencer Bachus, Birmingham REPRESENTATIVES Leon E. Panetta, 12 Carmel Valley Earl F. -
Congressional Record United States Th of America PROCEEDINGS and DEBATES of the 115 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION
E PL UR UM IB N U U S Congressional Record United States th of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 115 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION Vol. 163 WASHINGTON, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 2017 No. 96 House of Representatives The House met at noon and was securing the beachhead. The countless Finally, in March 2016, after 64 years called to order by the Speaker pro tem- heroes who stormed the beaches of Nor- and extensive recovery efforts, Staff pore (Mr. BERGMAN). mandy on that fateful day 73 years ago Sergeant Van Fossen’s remains were f will never be forgotten. confirmed found and returned to his I had the honor of visiting this hal- home in Heber Springs, Arkansas. DESIGNATION OF SPEAKER PRO lowed ground over Memorial Day, and I would like to extend my deepest TEMPORE while I was paying tribute to the brave condolences to the family of Staff Ser- The SPEAKER pro tempore laid be- soldiers who made the ultimate sac- geant Van Fossen and hope that they fore the House the following commu- rifice at the Normandy American Cem- are now able to find peace that he is fi- nication from the Speaker: etery and Memorial, an older French- nally home and in his final resting man by the name of Mr. Vonclair ap- place. WASHINGTON, DC, proached me simply wanting to honor June 6, 2017. CONWAY BIKESHARE PROGRAM I hereby appoint the Honorable JACK his liberators. He said that he just Mr. HILL. Mr. Speaker, last month BERGMAN to act as Speaker pro tempore on wanted to thank an American. -
Venezuela's Tragic Meltdown Hearing
VENEZUELA’S TRAGIC MELTDOWN HEARING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION MARCH 28, 2017 Serial No. 115–13 Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs ( Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.foreignaffairs.house.gov/ or http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/ U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 24–831PDF WASHINGTON : 2017 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Publishing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402–0001 VerDate 0ct 09 2002 12:45 May 02, 2017 Jkt 000000 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 5011 Sfmt 5011 F:\WORK\_WH\032817\24831 SHIRL COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS EDWARD R. ROYCE, California, Chairman CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey ELIOT L. ENGEL, New York ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida BRAD SHERMAN, California DANA ROHRABACHER, California GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York STEVE CHABOT, Ohio ALBIO SIRES, New Jersey JOE WILSON, South Carolina GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia MICHAEL T. MCCAUL, Texas THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida TED POE, Texas KAREN BASS, California DARRELL E. ISSA, California WILLIAM R. KEATING, Massachusetts TOM MARINO, Pennsylvania DAVID N. CICILLINE, Rhode Island JEFF DUNCAN, South Carolina AMI BERA, California MO BROOKS, Alabama LOIS FRANKEL, Florida PAUL COOK, California TULSI GABBARD, Hawaii SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas RON DESANTIS, Florida ROBIN L. KELLY, Illinois MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina BRENDAN F. BOYLE, Pennsylvania TED S. YOHO, Florida DINA TITUS, Nevada ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois NORMA J. -
April 24, 2020 (Florida Federal Qualifying) Report
2020 Florida Federal Candidate Qualifying Report / Finance Reports Cumulative Totals through March 31, 2020 Office Currently Elected Challenger Party Contributions Expenditures Total COH CD01 Matt Gaetz REP $ 1,638,555.81 $ 1,284,221.76 $ 496,295.82 CD01 Phil Ehr DEM $ 342,943.79 $ 188,474.53 $ 154,469.26 CD01 Greg Merk REP $ - $ - $ - CD01 John Mills REP $ 5,000.00 $ 5,132.61 $ 145.02 CD01 Albert Oram* NPA CD02 Neal Dunn REP $ 297,532.04 $ 264,484.41 $ 419,201.78 CD02 Kim O'Connor* WRI CD02 Kristy Thripp* WRI CD03 OPEN - Ted Yoho REP CD03 Kat Cammack REP $ 207,007.59 $ 41,054.05 $ 165,953.54 CD03 Ryan Chamberlin REP $ 101,333.00 $ 4,025.39 $ 97,307.61 CD03 Todd Chase REP $ 163,621.68 $ 27,032.07 $ 136,589.61 CD03 Adam Christensen DEM $ - $ - $ - CD03 Philip Dodds DEM $ 6,301.17 $ 4,035.13 $ 2,266.04 CD03 Bill Engelbrecht REP $ 27,050.00 $ 4,955.94 $ 22,094.06 CD03 Joe Dallas Millado* REP CD03 Gavin Rollins REP $ 106,370.00 $ 9,730.33 $ 96,639.67 CD03 Judson Sapp REP $ 430,233.01 $ 120,453.99 $ 310,011.88 CD03 Ed Silva* WRI CD03 James St. George REP $ 400,499.60 $ 64,207.88 $ 336,291.72 CD03 David Theus REP $ 6,392.11 $ 473.58 $ 5,918.53 CD03 Amy Pope Wells REP $ 56,982.45 $ 46,896.17 $ 10,086.28 CD03 Tom Wells DEM $ 1,559.31 $ 1,289.68 $ 295.58 CD04 John Rutherford REP $ 513,068.32 $ 281,060.16 $ 597,734.31 CD04 Erick Aguilar REP $ 11,342.00 $ 6,220.00 $ 5,122.00 CD04 Donna Deegan DEM $ 425,901.36 $ 165,436.85 $ 260,464.51 CD04 Gary Koniz* WRI CD05 Al Lawson DEM $ 355,730.10 $ 168,874.69 $ 201,527.67 CD05 Gary Adler REP $ 40,325.00 $ 920.08 $ 39,404.92 CD05 Albert Chester DEM $ 43,230.65 $ 28,044.61 $ 15,186.04 CD05 Roger Wagoner REP $ - $ - $ - CD06 Michael Waltz REP $ 1,308,541.18 $ 626,699.95 $ 733,402.64 CD06 Clint Curtis DEM $ 13,503.79 $ 1,152.12 $ 12,351.67 CD06 Alan Grayson WRI $ 69,913.27 $ 56,052.54 $ 716,034.49 CD06 John. -
Congressional Pictorial Directory.Indb I 5/16/11 10:19 AM Compiled Under the Direction of the Joint Committee on Printing Gregg Harper, Chairman
S. Prt. 112-1 One Hundred Twelfth Congress Congressional Pictorial Directory 2011 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON: 2011 congressional pictorial directory.indb I 5/16/11 10:19 AM Compiled Under the Direction of the Joint Committee on Printing Gregg Harper, Chairman For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Offi ce Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; DC area (202) 512-1800; Fax: (202) 512-2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402-0001 ISBN 978-0-16-087912-8 online version: www.fdsys.gov congressional pictorial directory.indb II 5/16/11 10:19 AM Contents Photographs of: Page President Barack H. Obama ................... V Vice President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. .............VII Speaker of the House John A. Boehner ......... IX President pro tempore of the Senate Daniel K. Inouye .......................... XI Photographs of: Senate and House Leadership ............XII-XIII Senate Officers and Officials ............. XIV-XVI House Officers and Officials ............XVII-XVIII Capitol Officials ........................... XIX Members (by State/District no.) ............ 1-152 Delegates and Resident Commissioner .... 153-154 State Delegations ........................ 155-177 Party Division ............................... 178 Alphabetical lists of: Senators ............................. 181-184 Representatives ....................... 185-197 Delegates and Resident Commissioner ........ 198 Closing date for compilation of the Pictorial Directory was March 4, 2011. * House terms not consecutive. † Also served previous Senate terms. †† Four-year term, elected 2008. congressional pictorial directory.indb III 5/16/11 10:19 AM congressional pictorial directory.indb IV 5/16/11 10:19 AM Barack H. Obama President of the United States congressional pictorial directory.indb V 5/16/11 10:20 AM congressional pictorial directory.indb VI 5/16/11 10:20 AM Joseph R. -
Schiano, Domin Mon December 30, 2013Mark Schreinerculture Bucs' S
Title Post date Byline Category House Cleaning at 1 Buc Place: Schiano,Mon DecemberDominik Out 30, 2013Mark SchreinerCulture Bucs' Schiano Future Up in the Air Sun December 29, 2013Mark SchreinerCulture Bomb Investigation in Clearwater Sun December 29, 2013Mark SchreinerLaw & Order Father, Son Die While Cave Diving Fri December 27, 2013The AssociatedLaw Press& Order Bobby Bowden's Grandson Dies in FriCrash December 27, 2013Robin SussinghamLaw & Order Melbourne's Novel Approach To ChristmasThu December Traffic 26,Stops 2013Susan Giles LawWantuck & Order Florida's New Minimum Wage TakesThu Effect December In January 26, 2013Kenny MaloneBusiness TPD Replace Family's Stolen Gifts, ButWed Dog December Still Missing 25, 2013Mark SchreinerLaw & Order 'Bollywood' Oscars Moved to April Tuein Tampa December 24, 2013Steve NewbornCulture St. Petersburg Police Shoot Car TheftMon Suspect December 23, 2013Mark SchreinerLaw & Order School At Heart of Bennett Grade-ChangeFri December Flap 20, 2013John O'ConnorEducation Paul Tash Loves WUSF Fri December 20, 2013Dalia ColonCulture Watch: Small Plane Crash at TampaFri Int'l December Airport Injures 20, 2013 PilotThe AssociatedLaw Press& Order Radel Won't Resign, Wants to RebuildFri December Trust 20, 2013The AssociatedPolitics Press President Commutes Sentences forFri 8, December Including Tampa 20, 2013 ManThe AssociatedLaw Press& Order Wanted: Student Vets with Kids forFri a SurveyDecember 20, 2013Bobbie O'BrienOff The Base Charles Sanders Loves WUSF Thu December 19, 2013Dalia ColonCulture USF Top FL College -
On the Eve of the Summit: Options for U.S
ON THE EVE OF THE SUMMIT: OPTIONS FOR U.S. DIPLOMACY ON NORTH KOREA HEARING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON ASIA AND THE PACIFIC AND NONPROLIFERATION OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED SIXTEENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION FEBRUARY 26, 2019 Serial No. 116–6 Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs ( Available: http://www.foreignaffairs.house.gov/, http://docs.house.gov, or http://www.govinfo.gov U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 35–364PDF WASHINGTON : 2019 COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS ELIOT L. ENGEL, New York, Chairman BRAD SHERMAN, California MICHAEL T. MCCAUL, Texas, Ranking GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York Member ALBIO SIRES, New Jersey CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia STEVE CHABOT, Ohio THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida JOE WILSON, South Carolina KAREN BASS, California SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania WILLIAM KEATING, Massachusetts TED S. YOHO, Florida DAVID CICILLINE, Rhode Island ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois AMI BERA, California LEE ZELDIN, New York JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas JIM SENSENBRENNER, Wisconsin DINA TITUS, Nevada ANN WAGNER, Missouri ADRIANO ESPAILLAT, New York BRIAN MAST, Florida TED LIEU, California FRANCIS ROONEY, Florida SUSAN WILD, Pennsylvania BRIAN FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania DEAN PHILLPS, Minnesota JOHN CURTIS, Utah ILHAN OMAR, Minnesota KEN BUCK, Colorado COLIN ALLRED, Texas RON WRIGHT, Texas ANDY LEVIN, Michigan GUY RESCHENTHALER, Pennsylvania ABIGAIL SPANBERGER, Virginia TIM BURCHETT, Tennessee CHRISSY HOULAHAN, Pennsylvania GREG PENCE, Indiana TOM MALINOWSKI, New Jersey -
Letter 4.1 All Pages
The Honorable Ron DeSantis Office of Governor Ron DeSantis State of Florida The Capitol 400 S. Monroe St. Tallahassee, FL 32399 Dear Governor DeSantis: We write to request, urgently, that you immediately take all possible steps, together with the state and federal governments, to, first and foremost, procure a field hospital in Immokalee to address the COVID-19 pandemic, and also to conduct aggressive, proactive COVID-19 testing and distribution of personal protective equipment (PPE), including sufficient quantities of sanitizer, in Immokalee. Unless this is done, Immokalee will almost certainly become an epicenter of contagion, with dire consequences not only for the farmworker community in Immokalee and the broader Southwest Florida area, but also the Florida agricultural industry and the food supply of the entire United States. There is no sugar-coating the facts: Immokalee is uniquely vulnerable due to a combination of critical factors, including: 1) overcrowded housing and transportation conditions; 2) the designation of agriculture as an essential industry during this pandemic; and 3) a near total lack of access to medical care and resources even before COVID-19. Overcrowded Housing and Transportation. Overcrowding is endemic in and around Immokalee, both at home and at work. As documented in the Collier County Needs Assessment for 2016-2020, “[h]ousing stock in Immokalee is not sufficient to meet the needs of the existing workforce,” but rather consists in large part of mobile homes that are “often run down and overpopulated.”1 And while grower-provided farmworker housing is generally compliant with the legally mandated 50 square feet per worker, that too is totally inadequate to meet the demands for social separation and quarantine once COVID-19 takes root. -
DCN Subject Received Input Date to (Recipient) from (Author) EST-00005648 on Behalf of C.C
DCN Subject Received Input Date To (Recipient) From (Author) EST-00005648 On behalf of C.C. and removing house off National 11/03/2017 11/03/2017 Micah Chambers Cheri Bustos EST-00005638 Regarding a DOI OIG issue. 11/02/2017 11/03/2017 Christopher Michelle Grisham Mansour EST-00005637 Urge you to include increased funding for USGS 11/02/2017 11/03/2017 Ryan Zinke Earl Blumenauer, Julia Brownley, Derek Kilmer, Judy Chu, Adam earthquake-related programs. Schiff, Salud Carbajal, Suzanne Bonamici, Peter DeFazio, Tony Cardenas, Suzan K. DelBene + 24 EST-00005561 Monument Review 10/31/2017 11/02/2017 Ryan Zinke Tom Udall, Jeff Merkley, Martin Heinrich, Richard Durbin EST-00005559 Rep. Alma Adams re: Catawba Indian Nation's 10/25/2017 11/01/2017 Ryan Zinke Alma Adams Land in Trust Request for King' s Mountain EST-00005555 asks Department to help combat outbreak of cattle 11/01/2017 11/01/2017 Ryan Zinke John Cornyn, Texas Delegation, Ted Cruz + 37 tick fever on ranches in south and central Texas EST-00005533 Senator Lankford re: Constituent JT - request for 10/06/2017 11/01/2017 OCL James Lankford EST-00005517 Status Report: Social Security Number Fraud 11/01/2017 11/01/2017 Ryan Zinke Sam Johnson, Mark Meadows EST-00005501 National Park Service Project # 34145 & 34159; 10/26/2017 10/31/2017 Ryan Zinke Bill Cassidy redevelopment and rooftop addition to NewOrleans EST-00005500 supports Save the Redwoods League's application 10/30/2017 10/31/2017 Ryan Zinke Dianne Feinstein for funding from the Land and Water Conservation EST-00005498 Supports inclusion of Beaver Valley as part of First 10/30/2017 10/31/2017 Ryan Zinke Patrick Meehan State National Historic Park in Pennsylvania EST-00005495 concern about proposed fee increase for national 10/27/2017 10/31/2017 Ryan Zinke Susan Collins, Angus, Jr. -
Download Presentation Slides (Pdf)
HOW TO DESIGN CLIMATE POLICY IN A POLARIZED WORLD Ursula Kreitmair, Ph.D. Department of Political Science University Of Nebraska-Lincoln THE CHALLENGE THE CULTURAL CONTEXT Division on political ideology remains on: Whether climate change is happening Whether greenhouse gases should be regulated Changing the dialogue surrounding climate change is critical, but we cannot solely rely on cultural and attitudinal change given our current timeline. In the meantime, we need accept culture as context to identify and design climate policies that are feasible and palatable in a polarized world. Ignoring culture and ideology results in lower likelihood of implementation and limited effectiveness Two prominent policy solutions Individual action to minimize carbon footprint Carbon pricing LIMITS TO INDIVIDUAL ACTION Limited effectiveness in curbing climate change: 1. Carbon emissions are systemic Further, efficacy of reduction in electricity consumption is limited if energy source is still heavily reliant on fossil fuels. E.g., even if individuals choose to transition to electric vehicles on a large scale, only about ~20% of electricity is from renewable sources (EIA 2020) 2. Willingness to change behavior to minimize carbon footprint is limited There is a floor to reducing consumption – especially for socio-economic groups not concerned about climate change E.g. catastrophizing allows dismissal of concerns, results in PTSD and generally reduces willingness to change behavior 3. Individuals are uncertain about which actions to take to mitigate carbon footprint Messaging is confusing (e.g., organic produce versus food miles) or overly restrictive E.g., individuals systematically overestimate the magnitude of small energy savings and underestimate large energy savings (Attari et al. -
FEMA-1545-DR, Florida Portuguese Speaking Population
FEMA-1545-DR, Florida Portuguese Speaking Population AL Holmes County GA MS Santa Rosa County Jackson County Escambia County Okaloosa County Walton County Washington County Nassau County 01 Gadsden County Jeff Miller (R) Jefferson County Hamilton County 04 Calhoun County Ander Crenshaw (R) Leon County Madison County Duval County Bay County Baker County Liberty County Duval County Wakulla County Suwannee County Columbia County 02 Bay County Taylor County Union County Allen Boyd, Jr. (D) Gulf County Lafayette County Bradford County Franklin County Clay County St. Johns County Gilchrist County Alachua County Putnam County 07 Dixie County 06 John L. Mica (R) Clifford B. Stearns (R) Putnam County Flagler County 03 Levy County Corrine Brown (D) Marion County 08 Ric Keller (R) Vol us i a C o un t y Citrus County Lake County 05 24 Seminole County Virginia Brown-Waite (R) Sumter County Tom Feeney (R) Hernando County Orange County Brevard County Pasco County 09 Osceola County Brevard County Michael Bilirakis (R) 10 15 Bill Young (R) Hillsborough County Polk County Dave Weldon (R) Pinellas County 11 12 Legend Jim Davis (D) Legend Adam Putnam (R) Indian River County Manatee County Hardee County 108th Congressional Districts Okeechobee County 13 Highlands County St. Lucie County Katherine Harris (R) Counties 16 Sarasota County DeSoto County Mark Foley (R) Martin County Charlotte County Portuguese speaking persons per sq. mile Glades County Charlotte County Charlotte County 1 - 25 22 E. Clay Shaw, Jr. (R) Palm Beach County 26 - 50 Lee County Hendry County 19 14 23 Robert Wexler (D) 51 - 100 Porter Goss (R) Alcee L. -
United States Senate
ORMER TATE EGISLATORS IN THE TH ONGRESS as of November 8, 2012 F S L 11 3 C d UNITED STATES Alabama Mario Diaz-Balart (R) Maryland Grace Meng (D) Kevin Brady (R) SENATE Nevada Spencer Bachus (R) Lois Frankel (D) Elijah E. Cummings (D) Jerrold Nadler (D) Joaquin Castro (D) New members in italics Dean Heller (R) Mo Brooks (R) John Mica (R) Andy Harris (R) Charles Rangel (D) Henry Cuellar (D) 42 Total Harry Reid (D) Mike Rogers (R) Jeff Miller (R) Steny Hoyer (D) Jose Serrano (D) John Culberson (R) William Posey (R) Chris Van Hollen (D) Louise Slaughter (D) Lloyd Doggett (D) 26 Democrats New Hampshire Alaska Dennis Ross (R) Paul Tonko (D) Pete Gallego (D) Jeanne Shaheen (D) Don Young (R) Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R) Massachusetts Gene Green (D) NCSL STAFF 16 Republicans Debbie Wasserman- Bill Keating (D) North Carolina Ralph Hall (R) New Jersey Arizona Schultz (D) Stephen Lynch (D) Howard Coble (R) Eddie Bernice Johnson Michael Bird Alabama Robert Menendez (D) Trent Franks (R) Daniel Webster (R) Edward Markey (D) Virginia Foxx (R) (D) Senior Federal Affairs Richard Shelby (R) Ann Kirkpatrick (D) Frederica Wilson (D) Walter Jones Jr. (R) Sam Johnson (R) Counsel New York Matt Salmon (R) Bill Young (R) Michigan Patrick McHenry (R) Kenny Marchant (R) (202) 624-8686 Alaska Charles Schumer (D) David Schweikert (R) Justin Amash (R) Robert Pittenger (R) Lamar Smith (R) Kyrsten Sinema (D) Georgia David Camp (R) Mark Veasey (D) Lisa Murkowski (R) Melvin Watt (D) Jeff Hurley North Carolina Sanford Bishop (D) Bill Huizenga (R) Randy Weber (R) Arkansas Kay Hagan (D) California Doug Collins (R) Sander Levin (D) Northern Mariana Sr.