The Issues
In the Senate, Vitter is a staunch conservative, but has sometimes broken from his party; he opposed, for example, the fall 2008 financial bailout. Vitter has a lifetime rating of 93 from the American Conservative Union and voted with his party 86 percent of the time in the 110th Congress.,
A devout Catholic, Vitter has established himself as a strong ally of the anti-abortion rights movement, sponsoring legislation to restrict the doctors who could prescribe RU-486, which can end an unwanted pregnancy. The legislation never made it out of committee. Vitter also authored legislation that would prohibit federal money from going to private abortion providers and supported legislation to prohibit the transport of minors across state lines in order to get an abortion.
In 2003, Vitter proposed a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. He also supports abstinence-only education, opposes gambling and is a strong ally of the National Rifle Association.
The Economy
In late 2008, Vitter opposed the government’s bailout of Wall Street. He said that he believed action was necessary, but the bailout was flawed by bias. “We need to minimize the pain on average Americans who did nothing wrong, not wipe it away from politicians, lenders, and yes, some borrowers who did plenty wrong, who were plenty irresponsible,” he said.
Vitter also opposed the government’s bailout of the Big Three auto companies. He helped lead the charge among GOP senators against the bill. Along with Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), Vitter was able to block the bailout package passed by the House and supported by the White House. He said the plan did not require the type of restructuring necessary for the auto companies to become successful again.
Continuing his trend of opposing large scale government spending, Vitter opposed President Obama’s $787 stimulus package approved in February 2009.
The Republican introduced an amendment that, he said, would have cut $50 billion in spending projects from the package, but it failed. “I’m disappointed that we were not able to come to a reasonable compromise on this package and pass a bill that contained projects and programs that were truly focused on creating new jobs and stimulating our economy. The bill that passed will not achieve these goals,” he wrote on his Web site.
Immigration
The chairman of the Senate Border Security Caucus, Vitter has made immigration one of his legislative priorities. He first received national attention on the issue when he led a group of senators in blocking President George W. Bush’s Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007. Vitter called the bill amnesty for illegal immigrants.
In March 2008, Vitter co-sponsored a tough immigration package. The package consisted of 11 bills that would have, among other things, required jail time for illegal immigrants caught crossing the border, required banks to check if someone applying for a credit card is illegal and report it, docked 10 percent of federal highway funding from any state that issued driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants and limited language assistance at federal agencies and voting booths.
Gulf Coast Recovery
Vitter has been critical of both the federal and state responses to Hurricane Katrina, which hit Louisana in 2005. In the aftermath of the disaster, he said he gave “the entire big government organized relief effort a failing grade, across the board.” Three weeks after the hurricane hit he teamed up with fellow Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) to request $250 billion in federal money to rebuild New Orleans and surrounding areas. The proposal died in committee.
Vitter had success in pushing through the Water Resources and Development Act, which he helped write as member of House-Senate legislative conference on the bill.
The law approved the construction of flood-protection systems in Louisiana and other water-restoration projects throughout the country. The bill was vetoed by President Bush, but the Senate voted to override the veto. "This bill is enormously important, and it has been a long time coming," Vitter said.(20)