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Legislative Recap April 4, 2025:House Stops; Senate Goes »

TO PASS THE HOUSE BILL (1 STAT 199, 3-3-1791), REPEALING AFTER THE LAST DAY OF JUNE NEXT, THE DUTIES HERETOFORE LAID UPON DISTILLED SPIRITS IMPORTED FROM ABROAD AND LAYING OTHERS IN THEIR STEAD, AND ALSO UPON SPIRITS DISTILLED IN THE UNITED STATES. (P. 43,89).

Feb. 12, 1791 .
All Votes Pro-Administrations Anti-Administrations Federalists Democratic Republicans
Yea 80%
 
 
 
 
20
12
 
5
 
1
 
2
 
Nay 20%
 
 
 
 
5
2
 
1
 
2
 
0
 
Not Voting
 
 
 
 
1
0
 
1
 
0
 
0
 

unknown. unknown Required.

Data from the official record atVoteView.com.

The Yea votes represented 80% of the country’s population by apportioning each state’s population to its voting senators.

Ideology Vote Chart
Key:
Democratic Republican - Yea

What you can do

Notes:Accuracy of Historical Records

Our database of roll call votes from 1789-1989 (1990 for House votes) comes from an academic data source,VoteView.com, that has digitized paper records going back more than 200 years. Because of the difficulty of this task, the accuracy of these vote records is reduced.

From October 2014 through July 2015, we displayed incorrect vote totals in some cases. Although the total correctly reflected the announced positions of Members of Congress, the totals incorrectly included “paired” votes, which is when two Members of Congress, one planning to vote in favor and the other against, plan ahead of time to both abstain.

In addition, these records do not always distinguish between Members of Congress not voting (abstaining) from Members of Congress who were not eligible to vote because they had not yet taken office, or for other reasons. As a result, you may see extra not-voting entries and in these cases Senate votes may show more than 100 senators listed!

“Aye” or “Yea”?

“Aye” and “Yea” mean the same thing, and so do “No” and “Nay”. Congress uses different words in different sorts of votes.

The U.S. Constitution says that bills should be decided on by the “yeas and nays” (Article I, Section 7). Congress takes this literally and uses “yea” and “nay” when voting on the final passage of bills.

All Senate votes use these words. But the House of Representatives uses “Aye” and “No” in other sorts of votes.

Download asCSV
VoteStatePartyLegislatorScore
Yea DE Anti-AdministrationBassett, Richard
Yea GA Anti-AdministrationFew, William
Yea VA Anti-AdministrationMonroe, James
Yea RI Anti-AdministrationStanton, Joseph
Yea NH Anti-AdministrationWingate, Paine
Yea SC   D  Butler, Pierce
Yea NH   D  Langdon, John
Yea NY FederalistKing, Rufus
Yea MD Pro-AdministrationCarroll, Charles
Yea NJ Pro-AdministrationDickinson, Philemon
Yea CT Pro-AdministrationEllsworth, Oliver
Yea NJ Pro-AdministrationElmer, Jonathan
Yea NC Pro-AdministrationHawkins, Benjamin
Yea MD Pro-AdministrationHenry, John
Yea SC Pro-AdministrationIzard, Ralph
Yea CT Pro-AdministrationJohnson, William
Yea NC Pro-AdministrationJohnston, Samuel
Yea PA Pro-AdministrationMorris, Robert
Yea DE Pro-AdministrationRead, George
Yea NY Pro-AdministrationSchuyler, Philip
Nay PA Anti-AdministrationMaclay, William
Nay RI FederalistFoster, Theodore
Nay GA FederalistGunn, James
Nay MA Pro-AdministrationDalton, Tristram
Nay MA Pro-AdministrationStrong, Caleb
No Vote VA Anti-AdministrationLee, Richard

Statistically Notable Votes

Statistically notable votes are the votes that are most surprising, or least predictable, given how other members of each voter’s party voted.

All Votes

Study Guide

What was the procedure for this vote?

  1. What was this vote on?
  2. Not all votes are meant to pass legislation. In the Senate some votes are not about legislation at all, since the Senate must vote to confirm presidential nominations to certain federal positions.

    You can learn more about the various motions used in Congress atEveryCRSReport.com. If you aren’t sure what the Senate was voting on, try seeing if it’s onthis list.

What is your analysis of this vote?

  1. What trends do you see in this vote?
  2. Members of Congress side together for many reasons beside being in the same political party, especially so for less prominent legislation or legislation specific to a certain region. What might have determined how the roll call came out in this case? Does it look like Members of Congress voted based on party, geography, or some other reason?

  3. How did your senators vote?
  4. There are two votes here that should be more important to you than all the others. These are the votes cast by your senators, which are meant to represent you and your community. Do you agree with how your senators voted? Why do you think they voted the way they did?

    If you don’t already know who your Members of Congress are you can find them byentering your address here.

  5. How much of the United States population is represented by the yeas?
  6. GovTrack displays the percentage of the United States population represented by the yeas on some Senate votes just under the vote totals. We do this to highlight how the people of the United States are represented in the Senate. Since each state has two senators, but state populations vary significantly, the individuals living in each state have different Senate representation. For example, California’s population of near 40 million is given the same number of senators as Wyoming’s population of about 600,000.

    Do the senators who voted yea represent a majority of the people of the United States? Does it matter?


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