Here are the 34 Republicans who voted against the second House spending bill
The House bill on Friday passed in a 366 to 34 vote, which saw a lot of Democratic support. One Democrat voted present.
The House of Representatives on Friday successfully passed one stopgap spending bill that would keep the government open through March 14, but a group of Republican lawmakers still opposed the legislation.
The House bill on Friday passed in a 366 to 34 vote, which included Democratic support. One Democrat also voted present. The bill significantly trimmed the 1547-page bill that was introduced on Tuesday. The bill was first trimmed on Thursday, but did not get the two-thirds majority to pass because of Democratic holdout and a group of 38 Republicans.
The revised edition which passed did not include an increase for the debt limit, a provision President-elect Donald Trump lobbied for.
Friday's vote saw only 34 conservatives oppose the legislation. Here is a list of who they are:
Arizona Rep. Andy Biggs
Arizona Rep. Debbie Lesko
Arizona Rep. Eli Crane
Colorado Rep. Greg Lopez
Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert
Florida Rep. Cory Mills
Georgia Rep. Andrew Clyde
Georgia Rep. Richard McCormick
Idaho Rep. Russ Fulcher
Indiana Rep. and Senator-elect Jim Banks
Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie
Maryland Rep. Andy Harris
Missouri Rep. Eric Burlison
Montana Rep. Matt Rosendale
North Carolina Rep. Dan Bishop
Oklahoma Rep. Josh Brecheen
Pennsylvania Rep. Scott Perry
South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace
Tennessee Rep. Andy Ogles
Tennessee Rep. Diana Harshbarger
Tennessee Rep. Scott DesJarlais
Tennessee Rep. Tim Burchett
Texas Rep. Beth Van Duyne
Texas Rep. Chip Roy
Texas Rep. Keith Self
Texas Rep. Lance Gooden
Texas Rep. Michael Cloud
Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales
Texas Rep. Wesley Hunt
Utah Rep. John Curtis
Virginia Rep. Bob Good
West Virginia Rep. Alexander Mooney
Wisconsin Rep. Glenn Grothman
Wisconsin Rep. Thomas Tiffany
The legislation still needs to pass the Senate by midnight on Friday in order to avoid a federal government shutdown. The White House has indicated that President Joe Biden will sign the bill when it comes across his desk.
Misty Severi is an evening news reporter for Just The News. You can follow her on X for more coverage.