There is not yet a single, authoritative public list that cleanly answers “which House Democrats voted to keep the government open” for the most recent government‑funding votes, and the most recent deals are split across several different packages and dates. What can be said with confidence is that House Democrats have been broadly and consistently in favor of legislation to reopen or keep the federal government funded, and in key recent votes they have almost unanimously supported the relevant funding or stopgap bills, often joined by a bloc of Republicans.

Context: Recent shutdown fight

  • The record‑long shutdown that ran 43 days ended in mid‑November when Congress approved a bipartisan continuing resolution that funded most of the government only through January 30, 2026.
  • That deal passed the House under a Republican majority but required large Democratic support, because a faction of conservatives opposed the compromise.

How House Democrats voted in practice

  • On major funding or reopening measures in this period, Democratic leaders framed the bills as necessary to protect federal workers, SNAP and other domestic programs from deeper cuts, so rank‑and‑file Democrats generally voted “yes” in large numbers.
  • By contrast, the main “no” votes usually came from hard‑line Republicans objecting either to spending levels or to the lack of policy riders, not from Democrats.

Recent January 2026 funding package

  • As of early January 2026, the House has passed a bipartisan three‑bill spending package funding parts of the government through September, again with strong Democratic backing because it rejected many of the steep cuts sought by conservatives.
  • Democrats have also just pushed through, with help from a group of Republicans, a bill to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies; that vote shows a similar pattern where almost all Democrats voted “yes” and a subset of Republicans joined them.

Why an exact “which Democrats” list is hard

  • Roll‑call records for each specific bill (for example, the November 2025 continuing resolution that ended the 43‑day shutdown, or the January 2026 three‑bill package) are kept vote‑by‑vote on the official House clerk and Congress.gov sites, and those are where to look up the exact names.
  • Because there have been multiple separate votes (short‑term CRs, partial funding “minibus” packages, and related bills), “which House Democrats voted to keep the government open” is not a single fixed list, but rather most of the caucus on each of several votes.

How to find the exact names

To get a precise roster for a specific vote:

  1. Identify the exact bill and date (for example, the November 2025 continuing resolution that ended the 43‑day shutdown, or the January 2026 three‑bill spending package mentioned in recent coverage).
  1. Go to the official House roll‑call records (the House clerk’s site or Congress.gov) and open the roll‑call for that bill; each page lists every member and how they voted (Yea/Nay/Present/Not Voting).

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.