Which votes and senators supported or opposed a third impeachment of Trump?
Executive summary
The House voted 344–79 on June 24, 2025 to table H.Res.537, a motion that effectively stopped that particular impeachment resolution against President Trump (clerk roll call shows yea 344, nay 79) [1]. Congress.gov lists at least two separate 119th‑Congress resolutions (H.Res.353 and H.Res.537) that sought to impeach Trump in 2025 but available sources do not provide a full roll‑call list of which individual members supported the original impeachment articles beyond the June 24 motion [2] [3] [1].
1. What happened on June 24, 2025 — the headline vote
On June 24, 2025 the House considered H.Res.537 and the specific parliamentary question recorded at Clerk Roll Call 175 was “On Motion to Table” the impeachment resolution; that motion passed with 344 yeas and 79 nays, which means the House majority voted to table — i.e., set aside — the resolution rather than advance it [1]. Congress.gov shows H.Res.537 as a 119th‑Congress impeachment resolution introduced in 2025, and Congress.gov separately lists H.Res.353 as another impeachment resolution in the same Congress [3] [2].
2. What “yea” and “nay” meant in practice
The recorded 344 yeas on the motion to table indicate a large House majority chose to block further action on H.Res.537 at that moment; the 79 nays represent members who opposed tabling and therefore wanted to proceed with the impeachment resolution [1]. Clerk.house.gov provides the aggregate totals for that roll call but the provided search results do not include the full, named list of which representatives voted which way — the aggregate figures are explicit while individual votes are not present in the current reporting [1].
3. Where this vote fits in the broader 2025 impeachment effort
Multiple efforts to impeach Trump in 2025 are documented: H.Res.353 and H.Res.537 are listed on Congress.gov as impeachment resolutions filed in the 119th Congress [2] [3]. Reporting and advocacy groups note campaigns and articles introduced in 2025 — for example, activists and organizations publicly pushed for impeachment and Democratic members filed articles — but the search results supplied do not enumerate subsequent House committee actions or any Senate disposition tied directly to those 2025 resolutions [4] [5].
4. Political context and why the motion was tabled
Analysts and scholars warned a third impeachment would face steep political obstacles in 2025: with Republicans controlling one or both chambers or holding leverage in Congress, legal experts said articles were “unlikely to move forward” and that even if the House impeached, a Republican Senate might refuse to hold a trial — the point being made in institutional analysis and academic commentary [6]. Newsweek and other outlets likewise framed future impeachment prospects as highly dependent on midterm results and partisan control [7].
5. Public opinion and partisan framing
Polling cited in the available material showed a majority of voters at one point supported a third impeachment in spring 2025, and advocates amplified that public sentiment to press Congress [8] [4]. Republican strategists, meanwhile, used the threat of impeachment as a political messaging tool ahead of the 2026 midterms, signaling that impeachment debates themselves became a campaign issue irrespective of their procedural success [9].
6. How this compares to Trump’s earlier impeachments
By contrast, the second impeachment in January 2021 reached the Senate and produced a 57–43 guilty vote but fell short of the two‑thirds threshold for conviction; that historical outcome is often invoked as precedent for the difficulty of securing a conviction even when the House impeaches [10]. The available 2025 sources draw the comparison to underscore that House impeachment alone does not remove a president — conviction in the Senate by two‑thirds is required [10].
7. Limits of available reporting and next steps for readers
Available sources here provide an aggregate roll‑call for the June 24 tabling (344–79) and list active impeachment resolutions (H.Res.353 and H.Res.537) but do not supply the full, named roll calls showing which individual House members voted yea or nay on that motion in these search results [1] [3] [2]. For a complete, itemized list of individual member votes, consult the Clerk of the House detailed roll‑call page and the full bill history on Congress.gov beyond the excerpts provided; those primary records will show each member’s recorded vote and the procedural steps that followed [1] [3].
If you want, I can retrieve and list the individual representatives recorded on Roll Call 175 or summarize the text of H.Res.353 and H.Res.537 as published on Congress.gov using the same source set.