US House Votes 215-208 to End Iran War in Bipartisan Rebuke as 4 Republicans Break With Trump

Date:

WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives voted Wednesday to order President Donald Trump to withdraw U.S. forces from Iran, passing a war powers resolution 215 to 208 in a rare bipartisan rebuke that exposed the growing fractures within Trump’s own party over a three-month conflict that has driven up fuel prices, stalled diplomatic negotiations, and consumed Washington’s attention with no clear end in sight.

Four Republicans broke with their party to side with Democrats on the vote: Representatives Tom Barrett of Michigan, Warren Davidson of Ohio, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, and Thomas Massie of Kentucky. No Democrats voted against the resolution. Seven members did not vote. When the final tally was announced, cheers erupted on the House floor.

The vote was a direct challenge to an administration that has insisted the Iran war is legally justified and militarily necessary. It was also a political signal that the war’s domestic costs — rising gasoline prices, food inflation, and midterm anxiety among Republican members in competitive districts — have accumulated to a point where the House’s slim Republican majority can no longer hold together in full support of the conflict.

“This reckless and costly war of choice needs to end today,” House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said ahead of the vote.

Representative Gregory Meeks of New York, who sponsored the resolution and serves as ranking member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, called the outcome a turning point. “The passage of this WPR today signals a significant turning point: more and more Republicans are listening to their constituents who do not want another open-ended war in the Middle East,” Meeks said in a statement after the vote.

A Vote Delayed, Then Forced Through

Wednesday’s outcome was the fourth war powers resolution attempt in the House since the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28. The previous three failed by increasingly narrow margins. Two weeks ago, House Speaker Mike Johnson abruptly halted floor action when a similar resolution appeared on the verge of passing, a procedural maneuver designed to protect Trump from a public congressional rebuke. The delay did not hold. Opposition within the Republican conference continued growing, and the resolution was brought back.

The 215-208 margin reflected exactly the dynamic Johnson had been trying to prevent: four Republicans willing to cross the aisle on a matter of constitutional principle and war costs, combined with unified Democratic support, producing a majority that Johnson’s procedural blocking could only delay, not stop.

What the Vote Does and Does Not Do

The practical effect of Wednesday’s House vote is, for now, limited. Legislation must pass both chambers of Congress to become binding, and the Senate has not yet scheduled further votes on a similar resolution that advanced procedurally last month after seven prior attempts failed. Even if both chambers passed matching resolutions, serious constitutional questions surround whether Congress can use war powers resolutions to override presidential military authority without a formal declaration of war.

Republican critics of the measure dismissed it as political theater. They argued Democrats were using the resolution to weaken the president and score midterm points rather than engage seriously with national security.

But the symbolic weight of the vote is real and consequential in ways that the legislative pathway does not fully capture. Three months into a conflict the president initially suggested would last four to six weeks, a majority of the House of Representatives has formally recorded that the war should end. That is the kind of institutional statement that shapes the political environment around negotiations, defense budget debates, and the November elections regardless of whether the resolution ever becomes law.

The Broader Republican Fracture

Wednesday’s Iran war powers vote was not the only sign of congressional Republican discomfort with Trump’s agenda. The same day, the House approved a procedural motion advancing the Ukraine Support Act, which would provide security assistance to Ukraine in its war against Russia. Six Republicans and one independent who typically votes with the party supported the Ukraine measure, another indication of movement in the Republican conference on foreign policy questions.

Republican lawmakers also publicly criticized Trump’s selection of Bill Pulte, a mortgage regulator with no national security background, to serve as acting director of national intelligence, signaling resistance to loyalty-based appointments in sensitive national security roles.

Republicans have also recently pushed back on Trump’s plan to create a compensation fund for political allies who claimed to have been targeted by the Biden administration’s Justice Department, a separate dispute that has generated its own internal party friction.

The cumulative picture is of a Republican majority in Congress that spent the first months of Trump’s term with near-total internal discipline beginning to show pressure points on issues where constituents’ direct economic interests, constitutional principles, and foreign policy instincts diverge from the White House’s positions.

The Economic Dimension

Democrats have leaned into the war’s domestic economic costs as a central message heading into November. U.S. producer prices posted their largest increase in four years in April, driven by higher costs for goods and services since the war began. Gasoline prices have been a particular focus, with the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz reducing global oil flows and keeping fuel costs elevated in ways that every American driver experiences directly.

The constitutional argument Democrats have made alongside the economic one is straightforward: the U.S. Constitution assigns the power to declare war to Congress, not the president, and Trump launched the Iran conflict without congressional authorization. His administration has described the war as a national security necessity justified by the urgent need to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.

When Wars Outlast Their Political Coalitions

The House war powers vote illustrates a dynamic that has repeated itself in American military engagements across the postwar era: the political coalition that supports military action at its outset erodes as the conflict drags past its initially projected duration, the costs become visible, and the promised outcome remains elusive.

Trump predicted four to six weeks. The war is in its fourth month. He has periodically said a deal was days away. No deal has been signed. The Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed. Iran has not surrendered its nuclear program. Gas prices are up. Republican members in swing districts are hearing from constituents.

Four Republicans voting for a war powers resolution is not a revolt. It is a warning. If negotiations continue to stall, if the ceasefire continues to be violated, if gasoline prices stay high through summer and into the fall campaign season, that number will grow. The House majority that Johnson has been protecting by procedural delay may not be protectable much longer.

Trump’s administration insists the war is necessary and that congressional second-guessing undermines both the mission and American credibility. There is a version of that argument that carries weight, particularly when adversaries watch congressional votes for signs that American resolve is softening. But there is an equally strong version of the opposing argument: a war that Congress never authorized, fought for longer than the president promised, at a cost that American consumers are paying at every gas station in every congressional district, is precisely the kind of conflict the war powers framework was designed to constrain.

Wednesday’s vote did not end the war. It told the president, on the official record, that a majority of one chamber of Congress thinks it should.

Reuters/AP

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Several Injured After Lufthansa 787 Dreamliner Nose Gear Collapses in Frankfurt

Several airline employees were injured Thursday after the nose...

Hezbollah Rejects Latest Lebanon Ceasefire as Humiliating, Israel Kills 10 in Gaza and Four in Lebanon

 Hezbollah rejected the latest ceasefire agreement between Israel and...

Lawyers Say Spain Kidnapped Scottish Crime Boss From Bali as Extradition Battle Opens in Amsterdam

A Scottish fugitive described by European law enforcement as...

Deadly Sri Lanka Care Home Fire: 12 Killed, Director Arrested

A fire tore through a nursing home in western...