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Fact check: What are verified vote counts and dates for any House floor votes on a 2025 continuing resolution or SNAP funding measure?

Checked on October 29, 2025
Searched for:
"Verified House floor vote counts and dates for 2025 continuing resolution or SNAP funding measures"
"House votes continuing resolution 2025 roll call"
"House vote SNAP funding 2025 roll call"
Found 7 sources

Executive Summary

The materials provided do not contain a single, clearly verified set of House floor vote counts and dates specifically tied to a 2025 continuing resolution (CR) or a discrete SNAP-funding measure; instead the documents point to roll-call repositories and contemporaneous reporting about a broader government-funding impasse without listing an authoritative House-floor CR vote record in the excerpts supplied. Available roll-call compilations and news summaries confirm there were House and Senate actions and repeated attempts to move funding bills during the relevant period, but the exact House floor tallies and dates the user requested are not present in the supplied analyses and must be retrieved from the House roll-call records or official congressional sources referenced in the excerpts [1] [2] [3]. This analysis identifies what the provided sources do and do not show and where a definitive House vote record would be located.

1. What the provided roll-call references actually show — and what they omit

The supplied materials include references to the U.S. House and Senate roll-call compilations for the 119th Congress, 1st Session, which are the logical places to find verified vote counts and dates for any House-floor continuing resolution or SNAP funding vote, but the excerpts themselves do not reproduce a clear House CR vote line with a date and tally. The summaries explicitly say the House roll-call listing contains a range of votes on nominations, bills, and resolutions but “does not provide specific information on verified vote counts and dates for House floor votes on a 2025 continuing resolution or SNAP funding measure” [1] [2]. That omission means the dataset you were given is a pointer, not the final evidence; the primary House roll-call records would be the authoritative source to extract the exact vote number, date, yea-nay counts, and vote text.

2. Context from contemporaneous reporting: shutdown, Senate obstruction, and SNAP pressure

Contemporary news summaries in the supplied analyses describe a government funding stalemate late in October 2025, with Senate Democrats repeatedly blocking a funding bill and the Senate not planning to vote on a House-passed measure to reopen government, but they stop short of reproducing a House CR vote count [3] [4]. Those reports also highlight direct program consequences such as the USDA saying it could not use contingency funds to keep SNAP benefits flowing during a shutdown, and senators introducing SNAP-focused bills — facts showing urgency around SNAP even if a specific House-floor SNAP funding roll-call is not documented in the excerpts [5] [4]. The supplied coverage frames a political impasse: House action to pass measures, Senate refusal or procedural blocks, and executive-branch operational limits on program continuity.

3. Competing narratives inside the supplied sources — what each side emphasizes

The supplied documents reveal two competing legislative narratives. House leaders and Appropriations Committee officials expressed confidence in advancing full-year spending bills and claimed progress toward compromise language [6]. By contrast, Senate Democrats and Senate leadership in reporting emphasized repeated blocks and procedural resistance to GOP-passed funding measures, noting multiple failed attempts to advance a government-funding bill in the Senate [3] [4]. These are not contradictory facts but different emphases: the House materials referenced indicate activity and formal roll-call logs exist, while Senate coverage documents the political barrier to converting House-passed measures into enacted law. Absent in the analyses is a verbatim House-floor roll-call entry for the 2025 CR or a discrete SNAP-only funding vote that would resolve whose procedural claims reflect a specific tally.

4. Clear next steps to obtain the verified House vote counts and why they matter

To obtain the exact House-floor vote counts and dates the user requested, consult the official House roll-call records and the congressional record entries for the relevant 119th Congress dates — these are the primary, authoritative repositories that the excerpts point toward but do not reproduce [1] [2]. The supplied reporting establishes the legislative context — shutdown dynamics, Senate blocks, and SNAP funding urgency — but only the House roll-call transcripts will provide the definitive vote number, date, and yea/nay tallies. If you want, I can extract and present those precise House roll-call entries and cite the exact vote numbers and dates if you provide access to the House Clerk or Congress.gov roll-call text; based on the provided analyses, doing so is the necessary final step to answer your original question with full verification.

Want to dive deeper?
What were the roll call vote numbers and outcomes for any House continuing resolution (CR) in 2025?
Which specific House roll call votes in 2025 addressed Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) funding and what were their tallies?
Did the House pass any short-term funding bills in 2025 that included SNAP provisions and what were the vote margins?
How did House committees and leadership influence the floor schedule for 2025 CR or SNAP measures?
Where can I find the official Clerk of the House or Congress.gov roll call records for 2025 funding votes?