House Roll Call

H.R.7006

Roll 26 • Congress 119, Session 2 • Jan 14, 2026 5:15 PM • Result: Failed

← Back to roll call listView bill pageClerk recordAPI source

BillH.R.7006 — Financial Services and General Government and National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2026
Vote questionOn Agreeing to the Amendment
Vote typeRecorded Vote
ResultFailed
TotalsYea 163 / Nay 257 / Present 1 / Not Voting 16
PartyYeaNayPresentNot Voting
R16346111
D021105
I0000

Research Brief

On Agreeing to the Amendment

Bill Analysis

HR 7006 is the FY2026 appropriations bill for (1) Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) and (2) National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs. It provides discretionary budget authority and operational conditions for a wide range of financial regulators, tax and trade agencies, the federal judiciary, the Executive Office of the President, and U.S. foreign affairs and security-related international programs.

On the FSGG side, the bill typically funds: the Department of the Treasury (including the Internal Revenue Service, Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, and Financial Crimes Enforcement Network); the Judiciary; the District of Columbia; the Small Business Administration; the Securities and Exchange Commission; the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; the Federal Trade Commission; the Federal Communications Commission; the General Services Administration (federal buildings, real property, and government-wide technology); and various independent agencies (e.g., Office of Government Ethics, U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission). It sets spending levels, staffing caps, and policy riders affecting tax enforcement, financial regulation, consumer protection, and federal procurement/IT.

The National Security, State, and Related Programs division covers the Department of State and U.S. Agency for Global Media, plus international organizations and programs with security or diplomatic relevance. It appropriates funds for diplomatic operations, embassy security, public diplomacy, contributions to international organizations and peacekeeping, and certain foreign assistance accounts tied to national security. It may include conditions on aid, reporting requirements on geopolitical hotspots, and restrictions related to human rights, sanctions, and security cooperation.

Beneficiaries include federal employees and contractors in funded agencies, U.S. taxpayers and businesses interacting with IRS, SEC, SBA, and other regulators, and foreign partners receiving U.S. security-related assistance. Regulated entities are indirectly affected through appropriations-linked directives to financial, trade, and consumer regulators.

The bill applies to the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2025 (FY2026). It generally includes obligation and expenditure timelines, reprogramming thresholds, and multi‑year or no‑year funding for specified accounts. The noted latest action (“motion to reconsider laid on the table”) indicates the House completed action on a key vote, making that action final in that chamber.

Yea (163)

S
Scott Franklin

FL • R • Aye

L
Lisa McClain

MI • R • Aye

J
John Rutherford

FL • R • Aye

D
David Schweikert

AZ • R • Aye

P
Pete Sessions

TX • R • Aye

Nay (257)

K
Ken Calvert

CA • R • No

J
Jason Crow

CO • D • No

L
Lloyd Doggett

TX • D • No

J
John Garamendi

CA • D • No

J
John Mannion

NY • D • No

L
Lucy McBath

GA • D • No

R
Rashida Tlaib

MI • D • No

N
Nydia Velázquez

NY • D • No

D
Debbie Wasserman Schultz

FL • D • No

Present (1)

Not Voting (16)

E
Eric Swalwell

CA • D • Not Voting