U.S. House of Representatives
Committee assignments •
Committee on Ways and Means •
Subcommittee on Health •
Subcommittee on Social Security Caucus memberships • Co-Chair of the Unexploded Ordnance Caucus
Tenure Since entering Congress, Brown-Waite has garnered a lifetime rating of 90 from the
American Conservative Union. However, she broke with her party on a few occasions. She criticized
George W. Bush for fielding questions from hand-picked crowds. "Let me tell you the difference between a GWB town-hall meeting – George W. Bush – and a GBW – Ginny Brown-Waite – town-hall meeting: I don't load the audience with just the choir," she once said. She was one of five Republicans who voted against a bill to give
Terri Schiavo's parents the right to sue in federal court to keep her alive (Schiavo's home was located in the 5th). She is a member of Republican groups such as
Christine Todd Whitman's
It's My Party Too,
Mike Castle's
Republican Main Street Partnership, and
The Wish List. Brown-Waite's district has one of the highest concentrations of retirees in the country. In early 2005, she referred to the current
Social Security system as a "
Ponzi scheme". However, she was skeptical of the president's proposal for personal accounts, saying that he hadn't done a good job of selling it to seniors. Brown-Waite voted against an amendment that would have cut off funding for
Planned Parenthood and other family planning organizations. Brown-Waite is a staunch advocate of a federal prohibition of online
poker. In 2006, she supported H.R. 4411, the
Goodlatte-Leach Internet Gambling Prohibition Act In 2008, she opposed H.R. 5767, the Payment Systems Protection Act (a bill that sought to place a moratorium on enforcement of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act while the
U.S. Treasury Department and the
Federal Reserve defined "unlawful Internet gambling"). An ardent opponent of
gun control, Brown-Waite was known for proudly carrying a gun on trips to her district. in the process angering French officials and constituents. She also caused a minor controversy when, commenting on the economic-stimulus package proposed by
President Bush in early 2008, she referred to the peoples of
Puerto Rico and
Guam as "foreign citizens" (when they are, in fact, American
citizens and
nationals, respectively). She has since clarified those comments with an article on the
Orlando Sentinel. On September 29, 2008, Brown-Waite voted against the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008,
Mark Foley scandal In September 2006, Brown-Waite was told about an incident from 2003 or 2004 when an apparently inebriated
Mark Foley had tried to gain access to the pages' dormitory. On September 28, 2006, an inappropriate e-mail that Foley sent was posted on
ABCNEWS.com's "The Blotter". Brown-Waite launched her own investigation and alerted Republican leadership on September 29 both about the dorm incident and about pages who had been made to feel uncomfortable by Foley. Foley resigned that day and the scandal erupted that evening with news of the lurid instant messages he had sent former pages. ==Political campaigns==