Which individual House Democrats are listed as voting Yea on Roll Call 28 for H.R. 7006 in the Clerk’s official record?

Checked on January 20, 2026
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Executive summary

The Clerk of the House’s roll call for Roll Call 28 on H.R. 7006 records 341 yeas, 79 nays, 0 present and 11 not voting, and the Clerk’s vote pages are the official source for the individual member entries [1] [2]. The reporting supplied here does not reproduce the Clerk’s full, line‑by‑line list of individual Democrats who voted Yea; therefore this analysis identifies the official record as the definitive source, cites what is available in the provided material, and notes third‑party compilations that name some Democratic Yea votes [1] [3].

1. What the user is actually asking and the primary source

The question asks for the names of individual House Democrats who appear as voting Yea on Roll Call 28 for H.R. 7006 in the Clerk of the House’s official record — meaning the authoritative list is the Clerk’s Roll Call 28 page, which shows vote totals and, on the full member‑vote view, the individual member entries (Clerk roll call 28 and member vote pages) [1] [4] [2]. The Clerk’s site is the primary, official source for individual votes and therefore must be cited for any definitive list [2].

2. What the Clerk’s record shows in the provided reporting

The excerpts provided from the Clerk establish the overall result — yea: 341; nay: 79; present: 0; not voting: 11 — and identify the relevant Clerk roll call pages for H.R. 7006 and its member votes [1] [4] [2]. Those pages, as provided, confirm the roll‑call number and bill but the supplied snippets do not include the full text of the member‑by‑member list within this dataset, so the complete roster of individual Democrats who voted Yea cannot be transcribed from the available material here [1] [4] [2].

3. Partial corroboration from third‑party reporting

A publicly posted compilation (independent list) claims that 153 Democrats voted Yea on H.R. 7006 and names specific members such as Rep. Danny Davis, Rep. Nikki Budzinski, and Rep. Bill Foster among those Yea votes [3]. That compilation can be a useful cross‑check but is not the Clerk’s official page; therefore, while it supplies individual names, the Clerk’s own member vote page remains the authoritative record to verify every listed Democrat [3] [2].

4. How to resolve the gap and obtain the authoritative list

To answer the question definitively — i.e., to enumerate every individual House Democrat listed as voting Yea on Roll Call 28 in the Clerk’s official record — the Clerk’s member vote page for Roll Call 28 must be consulted directly and the member entries exported or copied; the Clerk roll call pages referenced in the supplied reporting are precisely where that list appears [4] [2]. Congress.gov also hosts a companion roll call entry for the same vote that can be used to cross‑reference names [5]. Because the supplied sources here do not include the full, verbatim member list, this analysis stops short of printing a full name roster that cannot be confirmed from the materials provided [2] [5].

5. Context and competing narratives

Framing matters: partisan outlets and campaigns may emphasize the headline totals (341–79) or single out specific Democrats who supported the package to advance narratives about bipartisanship or party discipline; the Clerk’s list is an objective ledger that neutralizes such framing by showing each member’s recorded vote [1] [6]. Independent compilations that single out a subset of 153 Democrats [3] should be cross‑checked against the Clerk’s member vote page for accuracy before being treated as definitive [2] [3].

6. Bottom line

The Clerk of the House’s Roll Call 28 page is the definitive source for which individual House Democrats are recorded as voting Yea on H.R. 7006 and it records the overall vote totals (yea 341, nay 79, present 0, not voting 11) [1] [2]. The materials supplied here do not include the Clerk’s full member‑by‑member list, so a complete, authoritative name list cannot be reproduced from this dataset alone; third‑party compilations—while helpful—must be confirmed against the Clerk’s member vote page or Congress.gov entry [3] [5].

Want to dive deeper?
Where can I download the full member‑by‑member roll call CSV for Roll Call 28 on H.R. 7006 from the Clerk’s website?
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