House delays vote on measure to end Iran war

Summary

House lawmakers were set to vote Thursday on a measure directing Trump to withdraw from the war with Iran.

Why this matters

The vote is a test of Congress’ authority over military action and of whether bipartisan opposition to the Iran war is growing. Its outcome could shape both U.S. policy toward Iran and a potential legal fight over war powers.

House Republicans delayed a planned Thursday vote on a war powers resolution that would restrict President Donald Trump’s ability to continue U.S. military operations in Iran.

The vote was the latest effort to limit Trump’s military actions under the War Powers Resolution of 1973. Similar measures have failed before, but Democrats said support had grown.

On Tuesday, the Senate advanced a separate war powers resolution on Iran after four Republicans voted with Democrats and three other GOP senators were absent.

In the House, another war powers resolution tied last week, with three Republicans voting yes. Rep. Gregory Meeks, a New York Democrat sponsoring Thursday’s resolution, said he expected to have enough votes.

Under a 1973 law, presidents have 60 days to engage in military conflict before Congress must declare war or authorize force.

“We have to follow the law,” said Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, a Pennsylvania Republican who backed an Iran war powers resolution for the first time last week.

The White House said the War Powers Resolution no longer applied because of a ceasefire with Iran. Trump also said earlier this week he had been an hour away from ordering another strike, but did not after Gulf allies said they were negotiating to end the war.

He later wrote on social media that military leaders should “be prepared to go forward with a full, large scale assault of Iran, on a moment’s notice, in the event that an acceptable Deal is not reached.”

The House measure was a concurrent resolution that lawmakers said would take effect without Trump’s signature if both chambers approved it. Trump has also said the 1973 law is unconstitutional.

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