Senate War Powers Vote Fails β Joint Chiefs Orders Deeper Strikes the Same Day
The evening briefing on a failed war powers vote that leaves Congress without a check on the Iran operation, a U.S. submarine confirmed in the Indian Ocean kill, Iran's arsenal showing signs of depletion, and NATO intercepting its first missile of the conflict.
The U.S. Senate voted 47-53 Wednesday to reject a war powers resolution that would have required President Trump to seek congressional approval to continue military operations against Iran. The measure, brought by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), fell short of the 50-vote threshold needed to advance. Paul was the only Republican to support it. Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) was the only Democrat to vote against it, siding with Republicans to block the measure. Even if the resolution had passed the Senate, it faced a near-certain presidential veto and the two-thirds override threshold that Democrats cannot reach alone.
The vote came on the same day Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Dan Caine announced the U.S. would begin “striking progressively deeper” into Iran. The administration now has no active congressional check on the scope, duration, or geographic expansion of the operation. Trump’s War Powers notification β submitted two days late and omitting regime change as a stated objective β remains the only formal accounting Congress has received. The Senate’s decision to shield the president closes, for now, the most direct institutional mechanism for demanding answers.
What to Watch For
WHAT TO WATCH TOMORROW
Bushehr nuclear plant β Russia’s warning about the active nuclear facility remains unresolved. Any strike on or near Bushehr forces an IAEA response and changes the international calculus overnight.
House War Powers vote β The House is scheduled to take up a similar war powers resolution Thursday. Watch the Republican count β it tells you how much political cover the party is willing to provide, or not.
Bottom Line
The Senate declined to check the president's war powers on the same day the Joint Chiefs announced the strikes would go deeper. Congress now has no active mechanism to demand answers on scope, duration, or objectives. The War Powers notification remains the only formal accounting β and it still doesn't mention regime change.