When will the vote be taken for his 3rd inpeachment

Checked on December 6, 2025
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Executive summary

There is no scheduled House floor vote right now to impeach President Trump a third time; a July 2025 push to force a vote was tabled on June 24, 2025 when the House voted to set aside (table) H.Res.537 (vote passed 344–79) [1]. Multiple individual members have introduced or threatened articles (e.g., Shri Thanedar in April–May 2025) but leadership and House consensus have repeatedly declined to bring a binding floor impeachment vote [2] [3] [4].

1. What happened to the most recent push to force a third impeachment vote?

An effort to force a floor vote on H.Res.537 — an impeachment resolution — moved to the House floor but was effectively set aside when the House adopted a motion to table the measure on June 24, 2025; the clerk’s record shows the motion passed with 344 yeas and 79 nays [1]. The Associated Press reported the House “voted overwhelmingly … to set aside an effort to impeach President Donald Trump” after an earlier push tied to strikes on Iran [4].

2. Members who proposed or threatened articles and their actions

Representative Shri Thanedar announced an intent to impeach on April 29, 2025 and formally filed seven articles of impeachment in mid‑May, but then announced he would not force an immediate vote and said he would expand the articles and seek broader support [2] [3]. Other Democrats have voiced support in polling and commentary for a third impeachment, but institutional leaders have not scheduled a binding House impeachment vote [5] [3].

3. Why House leaders are reluctant to schedule a vote

Multiple reports and expert commentary point to the political math and strategic calculations: the GOP controlled both House and Senate for much of 2025, making impeachment politically and practically unlikely to lead to conviction in the Senate, and Democratic leaders have worried that impeachment is not the most effective or “utopian” response to policy disputes [6] [7]. News analysis noted Republicans may weaponize the prospect of impeachment for 2026 midterm messaging, further complicating efforts [8].

4. What a vote would require and what past precedent shows

Impeachment in the House requires a simple majority; conviction in the Senate requires two‑thirds. The House has impeached Trump twice before and sent articles to the Senate; neither resulted in removal because the Senate did not reach the two‑thirds threshold [9] [10]. Experts and historical examples cited in coverage show impeachment is both constitutional procedure and intensely political [11] [10].

5. Current probabilities and market/poll indicators

Outside observers and markets have tried to price impeachment odds: a prediction market framed the question of impeachment during calendar years (e.g., “Will Trump be impeached in 2025?”) and noted resolution criteria tied to a House majority vote [12]. Polls cited in reporting show a majority of voters in some surveys favored a third impeachment in spring 2025, but public sentiment does not force a House vote without member and leadership support [5] [13].

6. Competing narratives and hidden incentives

Democrats who favor impeachment argue it is a constitutional check on alleged abuses; some House Democrats have nonetheless deferred to other priorities and caucus strategy [3] [6]. Republican strategists, by contrast, have been reported to use the rhetoric of a “third impeachment” as a political cudgel to motivate turnout and frame midterm messaging, creating incentives for both amplification and avoidance by different actors [8] [7]. These partisan incentives shape whether leadership brings measures to the floor [4].

7. Bottom line for “When will the vote be taken?”

Available reporting shows no firm date for a House vote to impeach President Trump a third time; the most recent floor attempt was tabled on June 24, 2025 [1], and members who filed or threatened articles have either paused or expanded efforts rather than forcing immediate votes [3]. If control of the House changes in future midterms, media and analysts say a new House majority could pursue impeachment—but that outcome depends on election results and intra‑House politics, not on current scheduling [7] [8].

Limitations: Sources provided here cover actions through mid‑2025 and some later analysis; available sources do not mention any specific scheduled future vote date beyond the June 24, 2025 tabling action [1].

Want to dive deeper?
Has a date been announced for the House vote on his third impeachment?
What is the procedural timeline for a third impeachment in the House of Representatives?
Which committee is handling the impeachment resolution and when will they report it?
What majority is required in the House to impeach a president a third time?
How have past expedited impeachment votes been scheduled and could that apply here?