S.Amdt. 502 (Heller) to H.R. 1628: To strike the sunset of the repeal of the tax on employee health insurance premiums and health plan benefits.

Senator Heller, R-NV, introduced an amendment that would permanently repeal the “Cadillac Tax”, a tax on generous and comparatively costly health insurance plans. The tax was introduced as part of the original ACA, but its implementation has been delayed several times. This amendment would have repealed it entirely. This is an unusual situation as the tax plans are typically the result of union negotiations, but as the Washington Examiner notes, it’s the GOP working to help unions while the Democrats are fighting this repeal as they are every other part of the repeal on the ACA. The amendment did pass, but since H.R. 1628 ultimately did not, therefore the Cadillac Tax is still on track to go into effect in 2020.

This vote was related to amendment S.Amdt. 502 (115th) (Dean Heller) to H.R. 1628 (115th). The title of the amendment is S.Amdt. 502 (Heller) to H.R. 1628: To strike the sunset of the repeal of the tax on employee health insurance premiums and health plan benefits..

Vote Outcome

Amendment Agreed to. Simple Majority Required. Official record: senate.gov.

The Yea votes represented 45% of the country’s population by apportioning each state’s population to its voting senators.

Ideology Vote Chart Republican - Yea Democrat - Yea Republican - Nay Democrat - Nay

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Vote Details

“Aye” and “Yea” mean the same thing, and so do “No” and “Nay”. Congress uses different words in different sorts of votes.

The U.S. Constitution says that bills should be decided on by the “yeas and nays” (Article I, Section 7). Congress takes this literally and uses “yea” and “nay” when voting on the final passage of bills.

All Senate votes use these words. But the House of Representatives uses “Aye” and “No” in other sorts of votes.

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Vote State Party Representative Score
Yea NV D Cortez Masto, Catherine 0.26917501554249723
Yea NM D Heinrich, Martin 0.2602311336690429
Yea TN R Alexander, Lamar 0.6863684864033334
Yea WY R Barrasso, John 0.9091771993360854
Yea MO R Blunt, Roy 0.8198152214743116
Yea AR R Boozman, John 0.8634547881434104
Yea NC R Burr, Richard 0.7059136595433909
Yea WV R Capito, Shelley 0.7224353298900599
Yea LA R Cassidy, Bill 0.7607108386731152
Yea MS R Cochran, Thad 0.7122078017911748
Yea ME R Collins, Susan 0.4451980114556901
Yea TX R Cornyn, John 0.9047686207561887
Yea AR R Cotton, Tom 0.8786867620679865
Yea ID R Crapo, Mike 0.831824313252378
Yea TX R Cruz, Ted 0.9039557432896693
Yea MT R Daines, Steve 0.8428807477941896
Yea WY R Enzi, Michael 0.9180930115958928
Yea IA R Ernst, Joni 0.8084161451153559
Yea NE R Fischer, Deb 0.8653544392896689
Yea AZ R Flake, Jeff 0.8180535201738942
Yea CO R Gardner, Cory 0.745107880583903
Yea SC R Graham, Lindsey 0.7123829842258947
Yea IA R Grassley, Chuck 0.7602597908033687
Yea UT R Hatch, Orrin 0.8056456502953475
Yea NV R Heller, Dean 0.6890848854673925
Yea ND R Hoeven, John 0.777441517327431
Yea OK R Inhofe, Jim 1.0
Yea GA R Isakson, John 0.7849731380370779
Yea WI R Johnson, Ron 0.8338661664124101
Yea LA R Kennedy, John Neely 0.6867512976452176
Yea OK R Lankford, James 0.8801437727343312
Yea UT R Lee, Mike 0.8554607027983792
Yea AZ R McCain, John 0.7404777530237848
Yea KY R McConnell, Mitch 0.7949613690544788
Yea KS R Moran, Jerry 0.7825845216641111
Yea AK R Murkowski, Lisa 0.5691970770135386
Yea KY R Paul, Rand 0.7433499107279034
Yea GA R Perdue, David 0.8674954901428261
Yea OH R Portman, Rob 0.6342872625896793
Yea ID R Risch, James 0.899302852855033
Yea KS R Roberts, Pat 0.9338858404480421
Yea SD R Rounds, Mike 0.8610254276100631
Yea FL R Rubio, Marco 0.7932963775524853
Yea SC R Scott, Tim 0.8685874318190855
Yea AL R Shelby, Richard 0.6830030299020322
Yea AL R Strange, Luther 0.794128873303482
Yea AK R Sullivan, Dan 0.7228906556293551
Yea SD R Thune, John 0.8583751040378009
Yea NC R Tillis, Thom 0.7746929817525249
Yea PA R Toomey, Pat 0.7348984433104999
Yea MS R Wicker, Roger 0.8184998183787197
Yea IN R Young, Todd 0.6338800923805205
Nay WI D Baldwin, Tammy 0.1801889285557241
Nay CO D Bennet, Michael 0.36781585605746137
Nay CT D Blumenthal, Richard 0.039028889125273185
Nay NJ D Booker, Cory 0.1851695446077464
Nay OH D Brown, Sherrod 0.0754680360992877
Nay WA D Cantwell, Maria 0.25659092092120583
Nay MD D Cardin, Benjamin 0.18413802323823503
Nay DE D Carper, Thomas 0.30623226701062606
Nay PA D Casey, Bob 0.26380040331924487
Nay DE D Coons, Christopher 0.2909330325414929
Nay IN D Donnelly, Joe 0.5685105461395996
Nay IL D Duckworth, Tammy 0.26779023779532735
Nay IL D Durbin, Richard 0.07255639710232473
Nay CA D Feinstein, Dianne 0.16113394631872743
Nay MN D Franken, Al 0.055530724406301364
Nay NY D Gillibrand, Kirsten 0.007809295229280113
Nay CA D Harris, Kamala 0.18016778891030505
Nay NH D Hassan, Maggie 0.19637169740281796
Nay ND D Heitkamp, Heidi 0.55193069659749
Nay HI D Hirono, Mazie 0.11034759156168318
Nay VA D Kaine, Tim 0.2649202909408839
Nay MN D Klobuchar, Amy 0.23606085066239993
Nay VT D Leahy, Patrick 0.1847575062933775
Nay WV D Manchin, Joe 0.6082943445302841
Nay MA D Markey, Ed 0.03161748984762161
Nay MO D McCaskill, Claire 0.43337255191113067
Nay NJ D Menendez, Bob 0.14118665296675625
Nay OR D Merkley, Jeff 0.006245321046374881
Nay CT D Murphy, Christopher 0.1400051584063964
Nay WA D Murray, Patty 0.126616827629619
Nay FL D Nelson, Bill 0.42709099828612784
Nay MI D Peters, Gary 0.36390839108392087
Nay RI D Reed, Jack 0.08862802742051079
Nay HI D Schatz, Brian 0.13405173043572993
Nay NY D Schumer, Chuck 0.16769618286554022
Nay NH D Shaheen, Jeanne 0.23331682640970847
Nay MI D Stabenow, Debbie 0.2075738501978895
Nay MT D Tester, Jon 0.45990176878180916
Nay NM D Udall, Tom 0.2895031421116826
Nay MD D Van Hollen, Chris 0.22079226382909278
Nay VA D Warner, Mark 0.42489164303045085
Nay MA D Warren, Elizabeth 0.04812077919715288
Nay RI D Whitehouse, Sheldon 0.09347045066233106
Nay OR D Wyden, Ron 0.17468534371312644
Nay ME I King, Angus 0.44176760249922975
Nay VT I Sanders, Bernie 0.0
Nay TN R Corker, Bob 0.6867239059925896
Nay NE R Sasse, Ben 0.7485959714825241

Statistically Notable Votes

Statistically notable votes are the votes that are most surprising, or least predictable, given how other members of each voter’s party voted and other factors.

All Votes

Study Guide

How well do you understand this vote? Use this study guide to find out.

You can find answers to most of the questions below here on the vote page. For a guide to understanding the bill this vote was about, see here.

What was the procedure for this vote?

  1. What was this vote on?

Not all votes are meant to pass legislation. In the Senate some votes are not about legislation at all, since the Senate must vote to confirm presidential nominations to certain federal positions.

This vote is related to a bill. However, that doesn’t necessarily tell you what it is about. Congress makes many decisions in the process of passing legislation, such as on the procedures for debating the bill, whether to change the bill before voting on passage, and even whether to vote on passage at all.

This was a vote on an amendment to the bill. You can find the text of the amendment by looking for where it appears in the text of the Congressional Record. If you’re wondering why Congress doesn’t make it easier to find the text of each amendment, so are we.

You can learn more about the various motions used in Congress at EveryCRSReport.com. If you aren’t sure what the Senate was voting on, try seeing if it’s on this list.

Take a look at where this bill is in the legislative process. What might come next? Keep in mind what this specific vote was on, and the context of the bill. Will there be amendments? Will the other chamber of Congress vote on it, or let it die?

For this question it may help to briefly examine the bill itself.

What is your analysis of this vote?

  1. What trends do you see in this vote?

Members of Congress side together for many reasons beside being in the same political party, especially so for less prominent legislation or legislation specific to a certain region. What might have determined how the roll call came out in this case? Does it look like Members of Congress voted based on party, geography, or some other reason?

There are two votes here that should be more important to you than all the others. These are the votes cast by your senators, which are meant to represent you and your community. Do you agree with how your senators voted? Why do you think they voted the way they did?

If you don’t already know who your Members of Congress are you can find them by entering your address here.

GovTrack displays the percentage of the United States population represented by the yeas on some Senate votes just under the vote totals. We do this to highlight how the people of the United States are represented in the Senate. Since each state has two senators, but state populations vary significantly, the individuals living in each state have different Senate representation. For example, California’s population of near 40 million is given the same number of senators as Wyoming’s population of about 600,000.

Do the senators who voted yea represent a majority of the people of the United States? Does it matter?

Each vote’s study guide is a little different — we automatically choose which questions to include based on the information we have available about the vote. Study guides are a new feature to GovTrack. You can help us improve them by filling out this survey or by sending your feedback to hello@govtrack.us.

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