Understanding Roll Call Votes

Roll call votes are the most transparent form of decision-making in Congress. Each member’s position is recorded by name — creating a permanent, searchable record of how they voted. LegiList reproduces this data exactly as reported by Congress.gov, with added context for clarity.

1. What a Roll Call Vote Is
A roll call vote is a recorded vote where each member’s response is logged individually. It’s used for major decisions such as final passage, amendments, confirmations, or veto overrides.
  • In the House, members vote electronically using secure voting stations.
  • In the Senate, votes are conducted verbally as the clerk reads names aloud.
Each roll call is assigned a unique number (e.g., “Roll Call 184”) per chamber and session.
2. How Roll Calls Are Structured
Every recorded vote contains key metadata that describes its context and outcome:
  • Vote number: Sequential identifier within the session.
  • Date and time: When the vote occurred.
  • Question: The action being voted on (e.g., “On Passage of the Bill”).
  • Result: Whether it passed, failed, or was agreed to.
This structure is consistent across all official House and Senate records.
3. Reading the Columns
Roll call tables typically include three or four main categories:
  • Yea: Votes in favor of the motion or bill.
  • Nay: Votes opposed to it.
  • Present: Member present but not voting for or against.
  • Not Voting: Absent or abstained entirely.
LegiList preserves these categories exactly to reflect the official congressional record.
4. How Votes Are Decided
A motion passes when it meets the required threshold:
  • Simple majority: Most common for ordinary legislation.
  • Two-thirds majority: Required for veto overrides and constitutional amendments.
  • Three-fifths majority (Senate): Needed to invoke cloture and end a filibuster.
Once the threshold is met, the presiding officer announces the result, which becomes final and published in the Congressional Record.
5. Corrections and Late Changes
Members occasionally request corrections after a vote — for example, if their card failed or they misspoke. These are noted in the Congressional Record but don’t change the official tally.
  • Corrections are annotated with “intended to vote…” statements.
  • These do not affect the outcome but remain part of the historical record.
LegiList reflects only the final, official totals from Congress.gov to maintain accuracy.
6. How LegiList Displays Roll Calls
On each bill page, LegiList includes an interactive vote record section showing:
  • Total votes by category (Yea, Nay, Present, Not Voting).
  • Member-level results linked to legislator profiles.
  • Outcome and date displayed in the same format as official records.
Roll call data is updated daily via the Congress.gov API — providing a real-time window into congressional decision-making.