House Passes War Powers Resolution to Curb Trump’s Iran Campaign, Raising Concerns Over Negotiating Leverage
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
(Worthy News) – The House of Representatives handed President Donald Trump a rare political setback Wednesday, voting 215-208 to pass a war powers resolution aimed at ending U.S. hostilities with Iran unless Congress gives formal authorization.
The vote is unlikely to force an immediate change in U.S. policy. Even if the Senate passes a similar measure, Trump is expected to veto it, and supporters do not appear to have the two-thirds majority needed to override him.
Still, the vote carried political weight. It exposed widening unease in Congress over the Iran conflict and raised concerns among Trump allies that lawmakers are weakening the president’s hand as he seeks a peace deal with Tehran.
Four Republicans joined Democrats in backing the measure: Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Tom Barrett of Michigan, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, and Warren Davidson of Ohio. All Democrats present supported the resolution.
The measure would require the withdrawal of U.S. forces from hostilities involving Iran unless Congress grants authorization. Democrats framed the vote as a constitutional check on presidential war powers. Republicans loyal to Trump countered that the vote was political theater at a delicate diplomatic moment.
“I think there’s no Democrat, no Republican that can tell you what forces they would want pulled from Iran. They just want a stupid political vote, which is what this is,” House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Brian Mast, R-Fla., told Fox News.
Trump has argued that repeated war powers votes in Washington are already being used by Iranian officials as a talking point in negotiations.
“How do you feel when you’re negotiating, you’re winning every point, and they say, ‘But in Washington, they want to stop you from negotiating,’” Trump said last month. “It’s only political. It’s the Democrats. They’re dumb.”
The president has maintained that any deal with Iran must permanently end Tehran’s ambitions to produce a nuclear weapon. His supporters say Congress should not undercut the administration while talks are still underway and military pressure remains one of Washington’s strongest bargaining tools.
Rep. Abe Hamadeh, R-Ariz., defended giving Trump room to negotiate, saying the conflict has largely subsided since the first ceasefire was announced in early April.
“It doesn’t seem like it’s much of a war at this point,” Hamadeh told Fox News. “I know there’s some skirmishes back and forth, but we’ve got to give President Trump the latitude to negotiate.”
“So people who are trying to get in his way, I think, are being a little foolish right now,” he added. “The war for all intents and purposes ended back in April.”
The vote followed growing congressional concern that Trump did not receive formal authorization after the 60-day deadline set under the War Powers Act. Trump notified Congress at that deadline that he viewed hostilities as “terminated” because of the ceasefire with Iran, though multiple strikes have occurred since.
In the Senate, GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Rand Paul joined Democrats last month to advance a similar war powers resolution. That procedural vote allowed the measure to move toward a possible floor vote, though no final vote has been scheduled.
Paul and Massie have consistently opposed the Iran campaign and backed war powers measures throughout the conflict. Other Republicans moved toward supporting the resolution after the administration failed to secure explicit congressional authorization.
Barrett has proposed a separate 90-day authorization for use of military force that would define U.S. objectives in Iran while preventing the deployment of ground troops except for rescue and intelligence missions.
The Trump administration has long argued that the 1973 War Powers Resolution improperly limits presidential authority as commander-in-chief. Democrats, meanwhile, insist that Congress must reassert its constitutional role in matters of war and peace.
House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., who led the resolution, said Republican leaders had previously delayed the vote because they knew it had enough support to pass.
“We had a vote because of this president’s war of choice that was going to pass,” Meeks told reporters. “We had the votes. Without question, and they knew it.”
The vote comes as negotiations with Iran remain stalled despite Trump’s repeated statements that a deal may be possible. Both sides have continued exchanging limited strikes even as the administration seeks an agreement to end the fighting and block Iran’s nuclear weapons pathway.
For Trump, the House vote is a warning sign that congressional patience is thinning — and that even some Republicans are no longer willing to give the White House an open-ended hand in Iran.
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