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Vote Record

Click here to go directly to the House Clerk's Roll Call vote webpage, but you may want to read the helpful tips below before doing so.

Who Keeps Track of Votes?

The Clerk of the House of Representatives maintains a list of votes for each motion and piece of legislation that is voted on by the full House. These are called "roll call votes."

How can I look up a vote cast by Congressman Womack?

Simply follow the easy steps listed below to look up a vote cast by Congressman Womack or any other member. Note: You may want to read all of the steps before clicking on the appropriate links.

Step 1

Visit the Clerk's Roll Call Votes page. Each vote for the current Congress and previous Congresses will be listed on this page. 

Step 2

To see how members voted, locate the motion or legislation you are looking for and click the Roll Call Number, which will take you to a list indicating how each member voted, including Congressman Womack.

Step 3

After clicking on the appropriate roll, you will be able to search by name, party, state, and the vote.

How can I look up votes from previous years?

Visit the Clerk's Roll Call Votes page and select a different session of Congress in the drop down menu on the right located under “Congress.”

Why doesn't the office maintain its own list of votes on this webpage?

Direct access and instructions on how to use the Clerk's records provide the most immediate and complete access to all votes cast by Congressman Womack.
Date Roll Call # Bill Question Vote Bill Name
289 H.Amdt. 306 On the Amendment No An amendment numbered 42 printed in Part B of House Report 116-109 to reduce spending for each amount in Division A by 14 percent.
288 H.Amdt. 305 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for Maternal and Child Health accounts by $7,000,000.
287 H.Amdt. 304 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease by $3 million.
286 H.Amdt. 303 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for the CDC's Rape Prevention and Education program.
285 H.Amdt. 302 On the Amendment Aye Amendment sought to allow grant funds for apprenticeships to be used for apprenticeship programs registered with the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) as well as industry-recognized apprenticeship programs.
284 H.Amdt. 301 On the Amendment Aye Amendment sought to strike $90 million from the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's navigator program.
283 H.Amdt. 300 On the Amendment No An amendment numbered 36 printed in Part B of House Report 116-109 to prohibit the use of funds to be used to implement, administer or enforce the Trump administration's short-term, limited duration insurance rule.
282 H.Amdt. 299 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for the substance abuse and mental health services administration by $6.5 million in order to support youth suicide prevention strategies.
281 H.Amdt. 298 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for the Substance Abuse Treatment program by $1,000,000.
280 H.Amdt. 297 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases by $2 million the administration for community living aging and disability services programs to support innovative programs that assist young people with developmental disabilities in obtaining and sustaining long term employment, and that prepare employers to support the success of those employees and decreases the general department management account by a similar amount.
279 H.Amdt. 295 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases funding for the CDC's Domestic Violence Community Projects by $4.5 million.
278 H.Amdt. 294 On the Amendment Aye Amendment provides additional resources to the CDC to address and better understand the causes of the thousands of sudden unexpected deaths of children and infants that occur annually in the United States.
277 H.Amdt. 293 On the Amendment Aye Amendment funds the Regional Centers of Excellence in Substance Use Disorder Education, which allows the program to increase the amount of education that health professional students receive on substance use disorder, pain management, and addiction.
276 H.Amdt. 292 On the Amendment Aye Amendment provides $2 million in funds to expand the National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-Being to include a study of children impacted by a parents substance addiction to better understand the opioid epidemics impact on maltreated children.
275 H.Amdt. 291 On the Amendment Aye Amendment provides $10 million in funding for a new program at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to develop best practices for emergency treatment and the coordination and continuation of care for overdose patients.
274 H.Amdt. 290 On the Amendment Aye Amendment redirects $5 million in funding within the Departmental Management General Departmental Management account to amplify a public health campaign to promote vaccine usage.
273 H.Amdt. 289 On the Amendment Aye Amendment increases the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority account by $1,000,000 to support increased R&D for biosecurity.
272 H.Amdt. 288 On the Amendment No Amendment redirects funding for the Bureau of Labor Statistics Salaries and Expenses account by $1 for the purpose of instructing BLS to accept a wider and more forward-looking range of inputs into its range of projections for its workforce of the future.
271 H.Amdt. 287 On the Amendment Aye Amendment redirects $1 for the Substance Abuse Treatment account.
270 H.Amdt. 286 On the Amendment No Amendment strikes section 510, which prohibits HHS from spending any federal dollars to promulgate or adopt a national patient identifier.