Members of Congress were scored on
10 key votes cast in 2001 that had a significant impact on children's well-being.
Co-sponsorship of the comprehensive Act to Leave No Child Behind (S.940/H.R.1990),
introduced in May 2001 by Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) and Representative George
Miller (D-Calif.), was also considered. The CDF Action Council applauds the 10
Senators and 48 Representatives who co-sponsored the Act and scored 100 percent
in 2001. Eight Senators and 95 Representatives consistently left children behind
in 2001 with disgraceful scores below 10 percent.
"How can any Member of Congress say
we don't have the money to pay for child care and health care and education and
after-school programs for our children when the same Congress voted for a tax
cut that gives billions to the richest Americans with average incomes over $1
million," said Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children's Defense Fund
and the CDF Action Council. "We don't have a money problem in this country, we
have a priorities and values problem. We must hold our leaders accountable for
the choices they make. It is time to freeze the tax cuts for millionaires and
invest in our children."
The Best Senators for Children in
2001
Clinton (NY).....100
percent
Dayton (MN)......100 percent
Dodd (CT)........100 percent
Inouye (HI)......100 percent
Kennedy (MA).....100 percent
Mikulski (MD)....100 percent
Reed, Jack (RI)..100 percent
Sarbanes (MD)....100 percent
Schumer (NY).....100 percent
Wellstone (MN)...100 percent
The Worst Senators for Children in
2001
Allard (CO)...........9
percent
Smith, Robert (NH). 9 percent
Enzi (WY).............9 percent
Voinovich (OH)........9 percent
Gramm, Phil (TX)......9 percent
Helms (NC)............0 percent
Kyl (AZ)..............9 percent
Nickles (OK)..........0 percent
The Congressional Scorecard shows
that the House of Representatives voted to provide more than $7 billion in tax
cuts to 16 large corporations just weeks after deciding they could not afford
to guarantee $1 billion in help for abused and neglected children. The new corporate
tax breaks were in addition to the President's tax bill that will continue to
rob children for years to come. According to an analysis by Citizens for Tax Justice:
-- From 2001 to 2010 the wealthiest
one percent of Americans with average incomes over a million dollars would pocket
almost a half trillion dollars from the Bush tax cuts. Each member of this elite
group will average $342,000 in tax cuts over the decade.
-- By 2010, when (and if) the tax
cuts are fully in place, an astonishing 52 percent of the total will go to the
wealthiest one percent whose individual windfall in that year alone will average
$85,000.
The Congressional Scorecard reveals
a wide disparity in the ratings among state delegations based on their members'
votes.
The Best Delegations for Children
in 2001
Hawaii..........91
percent
Rhode Island....91 percent
North Dakota....88 percent
Vermont.........88 percent
Massachusetts...88 percent
West Virginia...75 percent
Oregon..........74 percent
Arkansas........71 percent
Delaware........70 percent
South Dakota....70 percent
The Worst Delegations for Children
in 2001
Alabama.........29
percent
Utah............27 percent
Kansas..........24 percent
Kentucky........22 percent
Oklahoma........20 percent
Arizona.........18 percent
New Hampshire...16 percent
Alaska..........15 percent
Idaho...........14 percent
Wyoming..........9 percent
"It is a national disgrace that nearly
12 million children live in poverty, more than 9 million children are uninsured,
and 7 million children are home alone after school in the richest nation on earth,"
said Edelman. "It is time for Congress to 'leave no child behind(r)' rather than
'leave no millionaire behind'."
To review the complete Congressional
Scorecard, visit http://www.cdfactioncouncil.org.
The CDF Action Council began in
1969 and is a private nonprofit organization under Section 501(c)(4) of the Internal
Revenue Code. We have never taken government funds.
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