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Fact check: What was the final vote tally for Trump's impeachment in the House in 2025?
1. Summary of the results
Based on the analyses provided, there was no successful impeachment vote against Trump in the House in 2025. Instead, the House voted to kill the impeachment effort entirely. The final vote tally was 344 to 79 on a motion to "table" (effectively kill) the articles of impeachment [1] [2] [3] [4].
The vote took place on June 24, 2025 [5], and represented a bipartisan rejection of the impeachment articles. Notably, 128 Democrats joined Republicans to table the measure, while 79 members (dozens of Democrats) supported the impeachment effort [2] [3]. The official record shows 9 members did not vote [4].
The impeachment articles were introduced by Representative Al Green and concerned Trump's Iran strikes [1] [2].
2. Missing context/alternative viewpoints
The original question assumes that an impeachment vote actually occurred and passed, when in reality the impeachment effort was blocked before it could proceed. Several important contextual elements are missing:
- The specific grounds for impeachment - the articles concerned Trump's military actions regarding Iran strikes [1] [2]
- The procedural nature of the vote - this was a motion to table (kill) the impeachment articles, not a vote on impeachment itself [1] [2]
- The bipartisan opposition - the measure failed with significant Democratic defections, showing it lacked broad support even within the opposition party [3]
- The political context - this appears to have been an individual effort by Representative Green rather than a party-wide Democratic initiative
3. Potential misinformation/bias in the original statement
The original question contains a fundamental factual error by presupposing that Trump was actually impeached by the House in 2025. The question asks for "the final vote tally for Trump's impeachment" when no impeachment vote occurred - instead, the House voted to prevent the impeachment from proceeding [1] [2] [3] [4].
This framing could mislead readers into believing an impeachment actually took place, when the historical record shows the opposite occurred. The question's wording suggests either:
- Misinformation about the actual events that transpired
- Confusion between a motion to table impeachment articles and an actual impeachment vote
- Potential bias in assuming impeachment proceedings were successful when they were decisively rejected
The correct framing would ask about the vote to table or kill the impeachment articles, not about an impeachment vote that never occurred.