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How often has the house voted since the government shutdown

Checked on November 9, 2025
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Executive Summary

The documents under review make three core claims: the 2025 shutdown began October 1, the House has repeatedly passed funding measures (reported as 14 CRs), and the House has been largely inactive on the floor at times (recess since September 19). Reporting overlaps and contradictions mean the single strongest, consistent verifiable claim is that the House passed multiple continuing resolutions to reopen funding while the Senate repeatedly blocked or failed to advance those measures [1] [2] [3]. This analysis extracts the key claims, compares them to available reporting, highlights inconsistencies, and identifies what authoritative records one should check to confirm exact vote counts and dates.

1. What the documents actually claim — a short inventory that raises the question readers ask first

The assembled analyses present a small set of repeated assertions about congressional behavior during the 2025 shutdown. They state that the shutdown began on October 1, 2025 and had stretched into November (counted as 37 days in one summary), that the House passed continuing resolutions repeatedly — reported as 14 times — to reopen funding, and that Senate Democrats or the Senate more broadly blocked those measures [4] [1] [2]. Another recurring claim is that the House was on recess as of September 19, creating an impression of limited House floor activity in the immediate lead-up [2]. Several of the source summaries, however, explicitly note they do not contain direct data on vote frequency, signaling gaps between claims and the underlying citations [5] [6].

2. The timeline the summaries construct — what dates anchor the reporting and why they matter

The single clear timeline anchor across these summaries is the October 1, 2025 start date for this shutdown, which sets the counting window [4]. From that anchor, one summary tallies 37 days of shutdown as of early November 2025; that dating drives the repeated references to repeated House votes and Senate blocks during October [4] [1]. The September 19 House recess date appears in at least one summary and complicates the timeline because a House recess would limit on-floor votes in late September even as appropriations talks continued; that context helps explain why major activity after October 1 centered on floor votes when Members were present and the Senate’s procedural calendar [2]. Those calendar details matter because counting “how often the House voted since the shutdown” requires clarity on both the shutdown start and any intervening recesses.

3. Counting the votes — the strongest specific numeric claims and where they come from

The most specific numeric claim in the assembled material is that the House passed continuing resolutions 14 times to fund the government after October 1, 2025, with the Senate blocking passage each time [1]. A related numeric claim is that Democrats voted against a “clean” funding bill 13 times and opposed a related clean CR six times in floor maneuvers described in the summaries [3]. Another variation describes Senate Majority Leader attempts numbered at 14 tries to get Democratic support on a House-approved funding bill [2]. These numbers align in tone (multiple repeat attempts) but diverge slightly in framing (House-passed CRs vs. Senate procedural attempts vs. Democratic roll-call opposition), making it essential to treat the counts as linked but not identical measures of legislative action.

4. Who did what — reconciling the House and Senate roles from the summaries

The documents collectively describe a House that repeatedly approved funding measures but a Senate that either blocked or failed to act on them, with Senate Democrats repeatedly using procedural tools to prevent advancement, and Senate leaders mounting repeated attempts to force consideration [1] [2] [3]. The framing differs across summaries: some emphasize the House’s productivity in sending CRs to the Senate [1], while others emphasize the Senate’s rare sessions (such as a Sunday session) and procedural battles as the principal impediment to resolution [7] [2]. The combined portrait is of a bicameral stalemate where the House’s volume of passed measures did not translate into enacted law because of Senate-level maneuvers and partisan divides.

5. Gaps, contradictions, and how to resolve them — where the summaries fall short

Several summaries explicitly note an absence of precise vote-frequency data and instead focus on causes or consequences of the shutdown; that means the key question — “how often has the House voted since the shutdown?” — is only partially answered by these texts [5] [6] [8]. Numeric claims (14 CRs, 13 Democratic votes against a clean bill) are stated without direct roll-call citations in the provided analyses, creating uncertainty about whether these figures count distinct House roll-call votes, repeated procedural motions, or multiple floor actions on the same legislative text [1] [3]. To resolve these gaps, one must consult the official House roll-call record (Clerk of the House), the Congressional Record, and contemporaneous floor vote trackers; those sources will yield definitive vote counts and dates.

6. Bottom line: what is reliably established and where to go next for definitive verification

From these summaries it is reliable that the shutdown began October 1, 2025, that House-Senate conflict produced many repeated attempts to fund the government, and that the House is credited with sending numerous continuing resolutions to the Senate while the Senate did not enact them [4] [1] [2]. The precise number of distinct House roll-call votes since the shutdown requires checking the Clerk’s roll-call archive, the Congressional Record, or reliable trackers like the House History Office and major outlets’ vote trackers to reconcile the 14/13 counts and to distinguish floor passage votes from procedural actions [1] [3]. For a definitive answer, consult those primary official records by date.

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