Legal status tracker

Trump Impeachment Tracker

Follow the public status of Trump impeachment activity, the H.Res.939 record, the steps required before removal, and how the 25th Amendment differs from impeachment. Updated May 15, 2026.

This page is not a prediction. It summarizes official procedural records and explains what each legal step would mean.

Tracker snapshot

No Senate trial shown

Current impeachment status

Introduced resolution tracked

Congress.gov lists H.Res.939 as introduced in the 119th Congress, referred to the House Judiciary Committee, with latest action on December 11, 2025.

House vote status

No House adoption shown

This tracker does not show an adopted article of impeachment for Trump in the 119th Congress source set reviewed on May 15, 2026.

Senate trial status

No active Senate trial

A Senate impeachment trial follows only after the House adopts articles of impeachment and transmits them to the Senate.

Trump impeachment count

Historical count and current resolution status

House impeachments

2

Trump was impeached by the House on December 18, 2019 and January 13, 2021.

Senate convictions

0

The Senate did not reach the two-thirds threshold for conviction in either trial.

Senate acquittals

2

The Senate acquitted Trump on February 5, 2020 and February 13, 2021.

Current tracked resolution

1

H.Res.939 is tracked here as introduced and referred, not adopted by the House.

House vote screen from the second Trump impeachment vote
Trump Second Impeachment Vote, U.S. House image in the public domain via Wikimedia Commons.
Nancy Pelosi signs the article of the second impeachment of Donald Trump
Second impeachment signing image, public-domain congressional media via Wikimedia Commons.

Current impeachment status

Introduced resolution tracked

Congress.gov lists H.Res.939 as introduced in the 119th Congress, referred to the House Judiciary Committee, with latest action on December 11, 2025.

House vote status

No House adoption shown

This tracker does not show an adopted article of impeachment for Trump in the 119th Congress source set reviewed on May 15, 2026.

Senate trial status

No active Senate trial

A Senate impeachment trial follows only after the House adopts articles of impeachment and transmits them to the Senate.

H.Res.939 status

Congress.gov lists H.Res.939 as an introduced House resolution from Representative Al Green of Texas. The tracker status shown by Congress.gov is introduced, with House Judiciary listed as the committee and a latest action dated December 11, 2025.

Trump impeachment timeline

December 18, 2019

First House impeachment

The House impeached Trump on two articles: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The case then moved to the Senate.

February 5, 2020

First Senate acquittal

The Senate acquitted Trump on both articles from the first impeachment trial.

January 13, 2021

Second House impeachment

The House impeached Trump for a second time on one article, incitement of insurrection, after the January 6 Capitol attack.

February 13, 2021

Second Senate acquittal

The Senate voted 57-43 to convict, short of the two-thirds threshold, so Trump was acquitted.

How impeachment would move

1

Articles are introduced or drafted

A member may introduce an impeachment resolution, or a committee may investigate and prepare articles. Introduction alone is not removal from office.

2

The House decides whether to impeach

If the House adopts articles by simple majority, the official has been impeached. The case can then move to the Senate.

3

The Senate holds a trial

For a presidential impeachment trial, the Chief Justice presides. Conviction requires two-thirds of senators present.

4

Conviction removes the official

If the Senate convicts on an article, the immediate consequence is removal. The Senate may separately consider disqualification from future office.

25th Amendment tracker context

The 25th Amendment is often searched alongside impeachment, but it is a different constitutional mechanism. It concerns presidential succession and inability, not congressional punishment for alleged misconduct.

Section 3: voluntary transfer

The president can send written notice that he is unable to discharge the powers and duties of office, making the vice president Acting President until a contrary declaration is sent.

Section 4: contested inability

The vice president and a majority of the Cabinet, or another body Congress may provide, can transmit a written declaration that the president is unable to serve.

Congress resolves a dispute

If the president contests the declaration and the vice president plus Cabinet majority renew it, Congress decides the issue under the voting thresholds in the amendment.

What this page does not do

It does not treat social-media claims as legal status, does not predict House or Senate votes, and does not say a resolution has passed unless an official record shows that procedural step.

Trump impeachment FAQ

Is Trump impeached right now?

Trump has been impeached twice historically, in 2019 and 2021. For the current 119th Congress status, this page tracks an introduced impeachment resolution, H.Res.939, but does not show House-adopted articles or an active Senate trial in the source set reviewed on May 15, 2026.

What is H.Res.939?

H.Res.939 is a House resolution introduced in December 2025 titled as impeaching Donald John Trump for high crimes and misdemeanors. Congress.gov lists it as introduced and referred to the House Judiciary Committee.

Does introducing an impeachment resolution remove a president?

No. Introduction is an early legislative step. Removal requires House impeachment followed by Senate conviction.

How is the 25th Amendment different from impeachment?

Impeachment is a congressional charge and trial process for alleged wrongdoing. The 25th Amendment deals with presidential death, resignation, removal, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of office.

Is this page predicting whether Trump will be impeached?

No. This tracker is not a prediction market and does not estimate odds. It summarizes public procedural status and official source links.

Source links

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