Is there a pending impeachment resolution in the House
Executive summary
Multiple formal impeachment resolutions against President Donald J. Trump have been filed and remain on the House docket — several carry H.Res. numbers and text on Congress.gov and have been referred to committee or laid on the table — but the House has not adopted final articles that would send an impeachment to the Senate, and prior snap efforts have been tabled on the floor [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6].
1. Filed resolutions: several distinct H.Res. entries exist on the House docket
Congress.gov lists multiple distinct House resolutions that explicitly seek to impeach President Trump — including H.Res.939, H.Res.353, H.Res.537 and H.Res.415 — each described on the Library of Congress site as “Impeaching Donald J. Trump” or similar language, showing that separate impeachment measures have been formally introduced in the 119th Congress [1] [2] [3] [4].
2. What “pending” means in this context: introduction, referral, or floor action
Under the House’s procedures, an introduced impeachment resolution is assigned a number and is “pending” when it awaits committee action, floor consideration, or a formal vote; committee-reported articles are privileged for immediate floor consideration, while many introduced resolutions are instead referred to committee or laid on the table [5] [3]. The text of H.Res.537 shows that it was submitted and referred to the Judiciary Committee and in some cases “laid on the table,” which is a procedural status short of adoption [3] [5].
3. Recent floor history: a December 2025 attempt was tabled by the House
A high-profile, rapid push to force a House vote late in 2025 resulted in the chamber voting to table an impeachment resolution after Rep. Al Green forced consideration and Democratic leaders voted “present,” which indicates the House disposed of that particular privileged motion without advancing adopted articles to the Senate [6]. Independent organizations reported votes and called some Members’ positions “advancing” the articles based on their voting behavior, but the House’s formal action was to table that motion [7] [6].
4. Parallel impeachment activity: judges and other targets have introduced articles too
Beyond resolutions aimed at the President, there are additional impeachment resolutions in the House targeting federal judges; reporting notes that Republican House allies of the President have advanced impeachment articles against several judges, and some of those resolutions are described as “pending” in the Republican-led House [8]. This demonstrates that multiple impeachment-style measures — against different officials — coexist on committee dockets and in public debate [8].
5. Bottom line: multiple resolutions are on the docket, but no adopted articles have been transmitted to the Senate
The documentary record on Congress.gov confirms that several impeachment resolutions have been introduced and are recorded as pending measures or referred to committees [1] [2] [3] [4], and the Congressional Research Service explains the mechanics by which such resolutions are pending, referred, or privileged for floor consideration [5]. At the same time, contemporaneous reporting shows the House voted to table a rapid impeachment push in December 2025 rather than adopt articles [6], so while active impeachment resolutions exist on the House docket, the House has not completed the majority vote to adopt and transmit final articles of impeachment to the Senate according to the sources provided [1] [3] [5] [6].