Which 38 Republicans voted against Trump's plan to keep the government running?

Congress has just over 12 hours to broker a deal to keep the U.S. government funded and prevent a partial closure of federal services just a week before Christmas.
As Republicans look forward to controlling the White House and both chambers of Congress in 2025, the party's chaotic struggle for unity is currently in the spotlight.
The House rejected a deal backed by President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday evening, failing by 174-235. The move to temporarily skirt a government shutdown was a variation of a bipartisan bill that failed earlier in the week after Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance came out against it.
Government shutdown live updates: Congress scrambles to make deal before midnight
Here are the 38 Republicans who departed from the future president and joined Democrats in voting against the continuing resolution.
Arizona
Rep. Andy Biggs
Rep. Elijah Crane
Rep. Paul Gosar
Rep. Debbie Lesko
Rep. David Schweikert
Colorado
Rep. Doug Lamborn
Rep. Greg Lopez
Florida
Rep. Aaron Bean
Rep. Kat Cammack
Rep. Cory Mills
Rep. Bill Posey
More: What’s affected by a government shutdown? Here’s which departments close down
Georgia
Rep. Andrew S. Clyde
Rep. Richard McCormick
Idaho
Rep. Russ Fulcher
Indiana
Rep. Victoria Spartz
Kentucky
Rep. Thomas Massie
Maryland
Rep. Andy Harris
More: Biden, Democrats take backseat amid shutdown chaos - convinced Republicans own it
Missouri
Rep. Eric Burlison
Montana
Rep. Matthew M. Rosendale, Sr.
Oklahoma
Rep. Josh Brecheen
Pennsylvania
Rep. Scott Perry
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South Carolina
Rep. Jeff Duncan
Rep. Nancy Mace
Rep. Ralph Norman
Tennessee
Rep. Tim Burchett
Rep. Andrew Ogles
Texas
Rep. Michael Cloud
Rep. Wesley Hunt
Rep. Morgan Luttrell
Rep. Nathaniel Moran
Rep. Chip Roy
Rep. Keith Self
Rep. Beth Van Duyne
Utah
Rep. John R. Curtis
Rep. Blake D. Moore
Virginia
Rep. Bob Good
West Virginia
Rep. Alexander X. Mooney
Wisconsin
Rep. Thomas P. Tiffany
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Which 38 Republicans voted against Trump's government funding bill?