Story Highlights
- GOP leaders cancelled a floor vote on a war powers resolution after they could not find enough votes to defeat it
- The vote is now expected to be held in early June following Memorial Day recess
- Four Republican senators previously voted to advance a similar resolution in the upper chamber
What Happened
Republicans struggled to find the votes to dismiss legislation that would compel President Donald Trump to withdraw from the war with Iran, delaying planned votes on the matter into June. The House had scheduled a vote on a war powers resolution brought by Democrats that would rein in Trump’s military campaign. But as it became clear Republicans would not have the numbers to defeat the bill, GOP leaders declined to hold a vote.
House Democratic leaders criticized the move, saying the Republican-controlled House was behaving like a subsidiary of the Trump administration. The resolution was introduced by New York Democratic Rep. Gregory Meeks, the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Meeks told reporters the vote is now expected to take place in early June after the chamber returns from its Memorial Day recess.
The White House has argued that the requirements of the War Powers Resolution no longer apply because of the ceasefire with Iran. At the same time, Trump said 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.
Republicans in the Senate are also working to ensure they have the votes to defeat another war powers resolution that advanced to a final vote earlier in the week, when four GOP senators supported the resolution and three others were absent. House Republican Leader Steve Scalise told reporters the vote was delayed to give absent lawmakers a chance to vote. House Speaker Mike Johnson did not answer questions from reporters as he exited the House chamber.
The cancelled vote was the latest sign of slipping Republican support for a war Trump launched more than two months ago without congressional approval. Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who voted against the war powers resolution, gave the key vote to advance a stalled resolution that would compel the administration to pull back from the Iran conflict.
Why It Matters
The decision to cancel the vote rather than lose it is, from a constitutional standpoint, deeply significant. By refusing to allow a recorded vote, Republican leadership effectively shielded the president from a formal congressional rebuke — but at the cost of publicly demonstrating that they could not guarantee his protection. The episode makes clear that the Iran conflict is no longer enjoying the reflexive deference that the Republican caucus typically extends to a Republican president on national security.
Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican who had previously voted against war powers resolutions, expressed frustration with the administration’s stance and specifically singled out Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as demonstrating incompetence on the issue. Tillis indicated a willingness to vote for an authorization for use of military force. When sitting members of the president’s own party are publicly calling out the Defense Secretary and threatening to support formal constraints on executive military authority, the political foundation for an open-ended conflict is visibly weakening.
The constitutional dimension is fundamental. The Founders vested the power to declare war in Congress for a specific reason — to prevent any single person from committing the nation to armed conflict without popular accountability. Critics of the Trump administration’s approach argue the Iran campaign, now months old with no formal congressional authorization, represents precisely the kind of executive overreach the War Powers Resolution of 1973 was designed to prevent.
Many Republican colleagues acknowledged they were feeling pressure from constituents over the cost of food and gas. The economic pain of the Iran conflict is translating into political pain, and Republican incumbents in competitive districts are calculating whether loyalty to the president on this issue is worth the electoral risk heading into November 2026.
Economic and Global Context
The Iran war has carried a measurable economic cost for American households. Gas prices have risen steadily since military operations began, and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has contributed to a broader energy supply squeeze affecting everything from heating fuel to airline tickets. The Federal Reserve has signaled that persistent energy inflation could require tighter monetary policy, raising borrowing costs for businesses and consumers alike.
Patience with the war has worn thin on Capitol Hill as the stalemate in the Strait of Hormuz has dragged on. The economic argument against an indefinite conflict is gaining force even among lawmakers who support the administration’s foreign policy objectives. Defense spending projections tied to the Iran campaign are also complicating the administration’s budget math at a time when Congress is already wrestling with multi-trillion-dollar deficit questions.
Internationally, U.S. allies have grown increasingly restive. European governments that depend on stable Persian Gulf energy flows have urged both sides toward a settlement, and some NATO partners have declined to provide logistical support for operations they view as constitutionally unauthorized by the U.S. Congress. This diplomatic friction carries long-term implications for alliance cohesion.
The war powers debate also has implications for future conflicts. Whatever precedent is set in the Iran case — whether the executive branch can maintain a sustained military campaign without formal congressional authorization — will shape the legal and political landscape for every future presidential decision on the use of force.
Implications
When Congress returns from recess, the war powers vote will be among the first and most consequential items on the legislative calendar. Democratic Rep. Meeks confirmed the vote is expected to come in early June. Republican leadership will need to either find the absent votes necessary to defeat the measure or watch it pass — a moment that would carry enormous symbolic weight even if the administration challenged its legal enforceability.
If the resolution passes, it will put the president in the constitutionally awkward position of claiming he need not comply with a direct instruction from Congress. That confrontation could accelerate a Supreme Court challenge that would ultimately define the boundaries of presidential war-making authority for a generation.
For voters, the episode is a window into how fractured the Republican Party has become over the Iran conflict. The coalition that backed Trump in 2024 on an America First platform that was skeptical of foreign intervention is now watching that president prosecute a Middle East war without clear exit conditions or formal congressional backing.
The political fallout will extend well into the 2026 midterm cycle. Every Republican who has publicly defected on the war powers question becomes a target for primary challenges from the right, while those who continue to back the president face accountability from a war-weary electorate on their left.
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