Which specific Israel-related bills did Jasmine Crockett vote for and against in 2023–2025?
Executive summary
Jasmine Crockett voted against the November 2, 2023 Republican-led Israel aid package described by her office as “partisan, inadequate, and fiscally irresponsible” [1]. In contrast, reporting and public roll-call summaries show she supported major bipartisan foreign-aid measures in 2024–2025 that included funding for Israel — notably the April 2024 supplemental (reported as H.R.8034 in one source) and a 2025 State/Foreign Operations measure that fast-tracked $3.3 billion in security assistance [2] [3] [4].
1. The November 2023 “partisan” package Crockett opposed
Congresswoman Crockett publicly announced a NO on the November 2, 2023 House package, criticizing Speaker Johnson’s bill as a vehicle to insert spending cuts into emergency aid and calling it a “shameful” Trojan Horse that excluded aid to Ukraine and cut IRS funding [1].
2. The April 2024 supplemental she supported
Multiple sources report that Crockett voted YEA on a large April 2024 foreign‑aid supplemental that bundled assistance for Israel alongside aid for Ukraine, Taiwan, Gaza and others, identified in one account as H.R.8034 and described as part of a broader $95 billion supplemental; that vote is presented as a key moment in which Crockett supported a package that allocated billions to Israel, including funds for the Iron Dome and munitions [2] [5].
3. The 2025 State/Foreign Operations vote and the $3.3 billion fast‑track
Reporting indicates Crockett voted for the FY2026 State/Foreign Operations measure folded into H.R.7006 in 2025, a bill that Congress recorded as sending another $3.3 billion in “security assistance” to Israel while also restricting U.S. funding for UNRWA and certain international accountability mechanisms; local analysis lists her among centrist Texas Democrats who supported the measure [3] [4].
4. Absences and votes to limit or cut aid — what the record says and omits
Some advocacy trackers claim Crockett was “absent among the six Democrats” on H.R.3565 (July 2025), a bill that would have limited arms transfers, implying she did not vote with the small group that sought cuts or limits [2]; the available reporting does not provide a roll‑call citation showing her explicit yea or nay on H.R.3565, and official roll‑call pages (Congress.gov) list many 2025 votes but require cross‑checking to tie each vote to an Israel‑related line item [6].
5. Two narratives: principle versus pragmatism
Crockett’s own framing, as reported, emphasizes negotiation and package politics — she has explained the April 2024 vote as acceptance of a “Christmas tree” omnibus where Democrats secured aid for Gaza and other priorities alongside Israel funding [5] [7] — while critics from progressive and pro‑Palestinian outlets interpret the same votes as enabling continued large-scale arms transfers to Israel and as a political betrayal, noting roll-call tallies that made such measures possible [4] [3].
6. Limitations and the path to definitive roll‑call mapping
This synthesis relies on Crockett’s press release and secondary reporting that name specific bills [1] [2] [3] [4] and on general roll‑call listings at Congress.gov that show many 2025 votes but do not, in the clipped sources provided, give a complete, line‑by‑line mapping of every Israel‑related vote between 2023–2025 [6]; a definitive vote list would require cross‑referencing each named bill (for example H.R.6126, H.R.8034, H.R.7006, H.R.3565) against the House roll‑call records on Congress.gov to produce an exhaustive, vote‑by‑vote table.
7. Bottom line
The verified pattern in the supplied reporting is clear: Crockett publicly opposed the November 2, 2023 Republican Israel aid package (NO) and later voted for large bipartisan foreign‑aid measures that included Israel funding in April 2024 and in 2025 (YES on the April 2024 supplemental and the 2025 State/Foreign Ops bill that included a $3.3 billion security assistance component), while accounts differ on whether she joined votes to limit aid or was absent for specific cut‑or‑limit measures [1] [2] [3] [4]. For a complete, itemized roll‑call history of every Israel‑related bill through 2025, the congressional roll‑call pages should be checked directly against the bill numbers mentioned in reporting [6].