Final Senate Vote Count for Laken Riley Act
Less than 60 votes • 25%
60-64 votes • 25%
65-69 votes • 25%
70 or more votes • 25%
Official Senate voting records published on the U.S. Senate website
John Fetterman Leads as First Senate Democrat to Support Laken Riley Act, Aiming for 60 Votes
Jan 8, 2025, 04:20 PM
The Laken Riley Act, a Republican-led bill aimed at requiring federal authorities to detain illegal immigrants arrested for theft-related crimes, has garnered increasing support from Democratic senators. Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) became the first Senate Democrat to sponsor the bill, emphasizing the need to prevent tragedies like the murder of Laken Riley, a nursing student killed by an illegal immigrant. The legislation, which passed the House with support from 48 Democrats, is set for a Senate vote. Additional Democratic senators, including Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Gary Peters (D-MI), and John Hickenlooper (D-CO), have also expressed their support, indicating a potential filibuster-proof majority with the necessary 60 votes. The bill also allows states to sue the Department of Homeland Security for harm caused by illegal immigration.
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Passes without amendments • 25%
Passes with amendments • 25%
Fails • 25%
Postponed • 25%
53-47 • 25%
Other • 25%
51-49 • 25%
52-48 • 25%
Passed without amendments • 25%
Passed with amendments • 25%
Failed • 25%
Postponed • 25%
Fails to pass • 25%
Passes with more than 65 votes • 25%
Passes with 55-65 votes • 25%
Passes with less than 55 votes • 25%
Less than 5 • 25%
No Democrats • 25%
More than 10 • 25%
5 to 10 • 25%
3-5 • 25%
1-2 • 25%
6 or more • 25%
None • 25%
Fails to pass • 25%
Passes with 70-79 votes • 25%
Passes with 80 or more votes • 25%
Passes with 60-69 votes • 25%
0-5 • 25%
More than 15 • 25%
11-15 • 25%
6-10 • 25%
60 to 64 • 25%
65 to 69 • 25%
70 or more • 25%
Less than 60 • 25%
More than 20 • 25%
10 or fewer • 25%
11 to 15 • 25%
16 to 20 • 25%
11 to 20 • 25%
5 to 10 • 25%
Less than 5 • 25%
More than 20 • 25%
Pass with 51-60 votes • 25%
Not voted by deadline • 25%
Fail • 25%
Pass with more than 60 votes • 25%
Texas • 25%
Arizona • 25%
Other • 25%
California • 25%