Where can I find official roll call records and downloadable spreadsheets of House impeachment votes across recent sessions?

Checked on January 16, 2026
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Executive summary

The authoritative starting point for official House roll call records is the Office of the Clerk’s Votes portal, which publishes individual roll-call pages for each vote including impeachment motions and the member-level yea/nay/present entries [1] [2] [3]. For contextual bill actions and a searchable congressional record of impeachment resolutions, the Library of Congress’s Congress.gov provides the legislative history and linked roll-call entries for specific resolutions across sessions [4] [5].

1. Official master records: the Office of the Clerk of the House

The Clerk’s Votes section is the canonical repository for House roll calls and contains individual roll-call pages that show the vote question, time, yea/nay/present tallies, and the members’ votes—examples include Roll Call 175 (H.Res.537, June 24, 2025) and Roll Call 322 (H.Res.939, Dec. 11, 2025), which display the full vote breakdowns [1] [3] [2]. The Clerk’s site also provides a search interface to locate votes by Congress, session, and vote type, and includes contact information for inquiries about records [1]. The Clerk pages are the best evidence for exact, official member-level votes on House impeachment motions because they are the institutional record maintained by the House [1].

2. Legislative context and linked roll-call logs: Congress.gov (Library of Congress)

Congress.gov compiles the formal actions on resolutions and bills—including impeachment resolutions—and links to record votes and related documents; entries for major recent impeachment measures (for example H.Res.755 in the 116th Congress and H.Res.24 in the 117th) list the actions and associated roll-call references that researchers use to connect the procedural history to the official votes [4] [5]. Congress.gov also provides a persistent bill/resolution page for each impeachment measure that aggregates text, summaries, and action timelines, which helps place individual roll-call records in legislative context [4] [5].

3. Practical, researcher-friendly options: GovTrack and archival collections

For bulk browsing, filtering, and researcher tools that present roll-call votes in an accessible interface (and which historically have offered exportable datasets), third-party trackers such as GovTrack maintain a congressional votes database that mirrors official roll calls and contextualizes motions and vote descriptions [6] [7]. The House History, Art & Archives Records Search is useful for older or archival research when primary records are sought beyond current-session webpages [8]. These secondary sources are valuable for downloading, filtering, or integrating vote data into analysis workflows, though users should cite the Clerk or Congress.gov for official provenance [6] [8].

4. How to find a specific impeachment roll call across recent sessions (step-by-step)

Begin at the Clerk’s Votes landing page and use the search or filter by Congress/session and “Roll Call Votes” to locate impeachment-related entries; open the roll-call page for the member-level table and official tally [1] [3] [2]. If the legislative history is required, open the corresponding bill/resolution page on Congress.gov to view all actions and linked roll-call references for that measure [4] [5]. For bulk or programmatic access, consult GovTrack’s votes database and the House History archives for downloadable or historical formats, and be prepared to verify figures back against Clerk/Congress.gov for official citation [6] [8].

5. Caveats, verification and contacting the House for data

The Clerk’s site is the institutional source; secondary services aggregate and often provide convenient exports but are not the official record—researchers should verify any dataset against the Clerk’s roll-call pages or Congress.gov action logs [1] [4]. The public Clerk pages include contact details for questions about records, which is the proper channel if a downloadable spreadsheet or machine-readable bulk file is needed and not readily visible on the site [1]. The available sources in this reporting do not explicitly document a formal “official spreadsheet” download mechanism on the Clerk’s page, so direct inquiry to the Clerk or use of GovTrack’s database are practical next steps when bulk files are required [1] [6].

Want to dive deeper?
How can I programmatically download and parse House roll-call votes for all 117th–119th Congress sessions?
What is the exact procedural text and roll-call history for H.Res.24 (Jan. 2021) and where are its associated member votes recorded?
Which public datasets compare member-level impeachment votes between the House and Senate, and how do they reconcile procedural differences?