Which House members voted to impeach and what were the full roll-call tallies?

Checked on December 11, 2025
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Executive summary

The House voted on a motion to table H.Res.537 (Impeaching Donald J. Trump) on June 24, 2025; the official roll shows the motion to table passed 344–79 (yea–nay) and thus the impeachment resolution was tabled (clerk record) [1]. The underlying resolutions to impeach (H.Res.537 and other H.Res. numbers filed by Democrats) are listed on Congress.gov; specifics of who voted which way are on the Clerk’s roll-call pages and mirrored in third‑party trackers like GovTrack [2] [3] [1] [4].

1. The formal record and the headline numbers

The authoritative House tally for Roll Call 175 — “On Motion to Table” regarding H.Res.537 — records the vote as yea: 344, nay: 79, present: 0, and the motion’s status as Passed (which means the impeachment resolution was tabled) [1]. GovTrack reproduces that official House roll-call summary for H.Res.537 and notes the vote passed by a simple majority [4]. Congress.gov lists H.Res.537 as the impeachment resolution’s legislative entry alongside other impeachment resolutions introduced in the 119th Congress [2] [3].

2. What “motion to table” means and why the tally matters

A motion to table is a procedural vote to set aside the resolution and is often the decisive action that kills or pauses a measure; the Clerk’s record shows the motion to table H.Res.537 passed 344–79, which functionally removed that specific impeachment resolution from immediate consideration [1]. GovTrack’s contextual notes emphasize that the House clerk’s roll is the source for the numerical result and that the Speaker is omitted from routine roll calls unless decisive [4]. The 344 yeas indicate a broad majority favored tabling rather than advancing the article of impeachment.

3. Who cast those votes — where to find the full roll-call list

The Clerk of the House publishes full roll-call lists (member-by-member) on its Votes pages; Roll Call 175’s page contains the individual yea/nay entries for every member [5] [1]. Congress.gov also catalogs the resolution texts and related procedural history for H.Res.537 and other impeachment resolutions in the 119th Congress, which is useful for linking text to votes [2] [3]. For media and researchers, sites such as GovTrack and the Clerk mirror the official entries and make the member-level data searchable [4] [5].

4. Multiple resolutions and competing actions in the 119th Congress

Multiple impeachment resolutions are visible in the congressional record for 2025–2026 (e.g., H.Res.353, H.Res.415, H.Res.537), reflecting different authors and varying allegations; Congress.gov summarizes the different articles and charges for these separate resolutions [3] [6] [2]. The June 24 procedural vote specifically concerned H.Res.537 (Rep. Al Green’s filing), but the presence of several resolutions means the political and legal terrain included competing strategies and claims among House Democrats and other members [2] [3].

5. How reporters and the public should interpret these sources

The Clerk’s roll-call page is the primary source for exact vote totals and member-by-member positions; third‑party aggregators like GovTrack and Congress.gov reprise that data and provide context about the resolution texts and congressional procedure [1] [4] [2]. Readers should note that a “passed” motion to table is a procedural defeat for the resolution’s proponents rather than a direct “guilty/innocent” finding; the Clerk’s notation makes that procedural outcome explicit [1].

6. Limitations in the available reporting and where to look next

Available sources in this packet supply the official tally and the existence of multiple impeachment resolutions, but they do not include the full, member-by-member roll text in the snippets provided here; the Clerk’s Votes page and the specific Roll Call 175 page are the documents that contain those names and votes [5] [1]. For a complete list of which House members voted yea or nay on this motion, consult the Clerk’s Roll Call 175 page directly and Congress.gov for the related resolution histories [1] [2].

Want to dive deeper?
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How can I find full roll-call votes for House impeachment proceedings online?
Which House members crossed party lines on impeachment votes and why?
How do House impeachment roll-call tallies compare to Senate conviction votes historically?
What is the procedural difference between impeaching an official and convicting in the Senate?