Breaking Down the Senate Roll Call Vote 615 : Who Voted Yes and No

Category: Site News

Official Senate Roll Call Vote 119_1_00615: Final Results and Voting Breakdown (Nov 10, 2025)

Direct from the Source: No Spin, No Lobbyists, Just Who Voted How

The U.S. Senate made democracy look…well, let’s call it complicated again on November 10, 2025. This was the cloture vote on S.Amdt. 3937 (Collins Amendment) to H.R. 5371 — basically a binding, “Can we please cut off the grandstanding and vote on this thing?” The answer: Just barely. 60 YEAs, 40 NAYs. Cloture was invoked. The amendment advanced. Welcome to American civics, dark-comedy edition.

How Did Your Senator Actually Vote?

Here’s how all 100 Senators voted on the cloture motion — directly from Senate.gov:
YEAs (60):
Banks (R-IN), Barrasso (R-WY), Blackburn (R-TN), Boozman (R-AR), Britt (R-AL), Budd (R-NC), Capito (R-WV), Cassidy (R-LA), Collins (R-ME), Cornyn (R-TX), Cortez Masto (D-NV), Cotton (R-AR), Cramer (R-ND), Crapo (R-ID), Cruz (R-TX), Curtis (R-UT), Daines (R-MT), Durbin (D-IL), Ernst (R-IA), Fetterman (D-PA), Fischer (R-NE), Graham (R-SC), Grassley (R-IA), Hagerty (R-TN), Hassan (D-NH), Hawley (R-MO), Hoeven (R-ND), Husted (R-OH), Hyde-Smith (R-MS), Johnson (R-WI), Justice (R-WV), Kaine (D-VA), Kennedy (R-LA), King (I-ME), Lankford (R-OK), Lee (R-UT), Lummis (R-WY), Marshall (R-KS), McConnell (R-KY), McCormick (R-PA), Moody (R-FL), Moran (R-KS), Moreno (R-OH), Mullin (R-OK), Murkowski (R-AK), Ricketts (R-NE), Risch (R-ID), Rosen (D-NV), Rounds (R-SD), Schmitt (R-MO), Scott (R-FL), Scott (R-SC), Shaheen (D-NH), Sheehy (R-MT), Sullivan (R-AK), Thune (R-SD), Tillis (R-NC), Tuberville (R-AL), Wicker (R-MS), Young (R-IN)
NAYs (40):
Alsobrooks (D-MD), Baldwin (D-WI), Bennet (D-CO), Blumenthal (D-CT), Blunt Rochester (D-DE), Booker (D-NJ), Cantwell (D-WA), Coons (D-DE), Duckworth (D-IL), Gallego (D-AZ), Gillibrand (D-NY), Heinrich (D-NM), Hickenlooper (D-CO), Hirono (D-HI), Kelly (D-AZ), Kim (D-NJ), Klobuchar (D-MN), Lujan (D-NM), Markey (D-MA), Merkley (D-OR), Murphy (D-CT), Murray (D-WA), Ossoff (D-GA), Padilla (D-CA), Paul (R-KY), Peters (D-MI), Reed (D-RI), Sanders (I-VT), Schatz (D-HI), Schiff (D-CA), Schumer (D-NY), Slotkin (D-MI), Smith (D-MN), Van Hollen (D-MD), Warner (D-VA), Warnock (D-GA), Warren (D-MA), Welch (D-VT), Whitehouse (D-RI), Wyden (D-OR)

Broken Down: Yes/No Votes by State (Find Your Senator’s Move)

Alabama:       Britt (Y), Tuberville (Y)
Alaska:        Murkowski (Y), Sullivan (Y)
Arizona:       Gallego (N), Kelly (N)
Arkansas:      Boozman (Y), Cotton (Y)
California:    Padilla (N), Schiff (N)
Colorado:      Bennet (N), Hickenlooper (N)
Connecticut:   Blumenthal (N), Murphy (N)
Delaware:      Blunt Rochester (N), Coons (N)
Florida:       Moody (Y), Scott (Y)
Georgia:       Ossoff (N), Warnock (N)
Hawaii:        Hirono (N), Schatz (N)
Idaho:         Crapo (Y), Risch (Y)
Illinois:      Duckworth (N), Durbin (Y)
Indiana:       Banks (Y), Young (Y)
Iowa:          Ernst (Y), Grassley (Y)
Kansas:        Marshall (Y), Moran (Y)
Kentucky:      McConnell (Y), Paul (N)
Louisiana:     Cassidy (Y), Kennedy (Y)
Maine:         Collins (Y), King (Y)
Maryland:      Alsobrooks (N), Van Hollen (N)
Massachusetts: Markey (N), Warren (N)
Michigan:      Peters (N), Slotkin (N)
Minnesota:     Klobuchar (N), Smith (N)
Mississippi:   Hyde-Smith (Y), Wicker (Y)
Missouri:      Hawley (Y), Schmitt (Y)
Montana:       Daines (Y), Sheehy (Y)
Nebraska:      Fischer (Y), Ricketts (Y)
Nevada:        Cortez Masto (Y), Rosen (Y)
New Hampshire: Hassan (Y), Shaheen (Y)
New Jersey:    Booker (N), Kim (N)
New Mexico:    Heinrich (N), Lujan (N)
New York:      Gillibrand (N), Schumer (N)
North Carolina: Budd (Y), Tillis (Y)
North Dakota:   Cramer (Y), Hoeven (Y)
Ohio:           Husted (Y), Moreno (Y)
Oklahoma:       Lankford (Y), Mullin (Y)
Oregon:         Merkley (N), Wyden (N)
Pennsylvania:   Fetterman (Y), McCormick (Y)
Rhode Island:   Reed (N), Whitehouse (N)
South Carolina: Graham (Y), Scott (Y)
South Dakota:   Rounds (Y), Thune (Y)
Tennessee:      Blackburn (Y), Hagerty (Y)
Texas:          Cornyn (Y), Cruz (Y)
Utah:           Curtis (Y), Lee (Y)
Vermont:        Sanders (N), Welch (N)
Virginia:       Kaine (Y), Warner (N)
Washington:     Cantwell (N), Murray (N)
West Virginia:  Capito (Y), Justice (Y)
Wisconsin:      Baldwin (N), Johnson (Y)
Wyoming:        Barrasso (Y), Lummis (Y)
  

Who Crossed the Aisle? The Outliers & Defectors

Democrats Yea: Cortez Masto (NV), Durbin (IL), Fetterman (PA), Hassan (NH), Kaine (VA), Rosen (NV), Shaheen (NH)
Independents: King (I-ME, Yea), Sanders (I-VT, Nay)
GOP Nay: Rand Paul, alone in a sea of red suits voting No (again).
These votes are a great reminder that party discipline only matters until a senator gets cranky, or their state calls.

What Does “Cloture” Even Mean? (Besides Boring TV)

This vote was on cloture for the Collins Amendment to H.R. 5371 – meaning, were enough senators fed up to end endless debate and open the final vote? (It takes 60. They got 60.) That’s the fragile machinery behind almost any major law in the U.S. If you want to see why progress typically limps along in Congress, just look at how exhausting it is to get 60 people with lifetime health care and lobbyist speed dials to agree on literally anything.

The Big Picture: What Should Voters Take from This?

If this looks like a mostly party-line vote with a few squishy moderates jumping the fence, that’s because it is. The handful of outliers matter, but the bulk of the Senate still plays for their tribe. Whether you care about the bill or just enjoy watching government dysfunction as a spectator sport, make sure you know how your Senator voted next time they show up in your inbox bragging about “bipartisanship.”

Official References & Related Resources

Want to see every single vote in excruciating detail?
See the full official record here.