Democrats are pushing for a vote next week on a resolution to curtail President
The effort was already under way to force a vote on a war powers resolution, but it gained fresh momentum as the US and Israel bombed Iran beginning early Saturday. House Democratic leaders announced last week — before the strikes — that they would begin procedures to force a floor vote on a resolution for Iran.
WATCH: Former US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton says President Trump was within his constitutional rights to attack Iran. Source: Bloomberg
The resolution directs Trump to terminate the use of armed forces against Iran, unless explicitly authorized by Congress. Presidents of both parties have skirted around war powers resolutions in the past.
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Passage is uncertain in the Republican-controlled House and Senate, with GOP members of both chambers expressing initial support for the raids. Senate Majority Leader
But the effort has gained the support of at least two House Republicans,
On the Senate side, Republican
House Democratic leader
“However, absent exigent circumstances, the Trump administration must seek authorization for the preemptive use of military force that that constitutes an act of war,” Jeffries’s statement said.
Representative
Massie on social media described the attack as “acts of war unauthorized by Congress.”
The resolution faced initial opposition from staunch pro-Israel House Democrats
Senate Democratic leader
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Trump would surely veto the resolution if passed, but substantial GOP votes for it could persuade him to limit the attacks on Iran. The Senate passed a procedural vote for a resolution against the strikes that culminated in the capture of Venezuelan leader
The US Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, but no president since Franklin Roosevelt in World War II has used that formal declaration, instead relying on less expansive authorization to deploy military force. Congress passed the War Powers Resolution in 1973 to slow the Vietnam war.
However, most presidents have sought some level of buy-in and approval from Congress, which approves the budget for the Pentagon.
“The Constitution is clear: The decision to take this nation to war rests with Congress, and launching large-scale military operations – particularly in the absence of an imminent threat to the United States – raises serious legal and constitutional concerns,” Senator
Other Senate Democrats, including
Rubio notified top congressional leaders in the House and Senate and on the intelligence committees of the strikes, the White House said.
Senator
“The President has stated the operation’s goals clearly: thwart permanently the ayatollahs’ desire to create a nuclear weapon, degrade their ballistic missile force and their production capacity, and destroy their naval and terrorism capabilities,” Wicker said in a statement.
Democratic Senator
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Laura Davison, Wendy Benjaminson
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