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Senate rejects bill to curb Trump on Iran. That fits a long pattern on war powers.

The Senate’s failure to pass a war powers resolution curbing the president’s ability to keep attacking Iran – with a similar expected outcome in the House – represents the latest example of how Congress in recent decades has become more of a bystander than a decider on U.S. military operations.

The House plans to vote Thursday on whether to constrain President Donald Trump. Lawmakers, though, could get another chance to weigh in on the war: The Trump administration is reportedly preparing to ask Congress to approve up to $50 billion in supplemental funding for the effort. But the debates over war powers, experts and lawmakers say, reflect an argument that started with the country’s founding: Which branch of government has more authority over military conflict?

The Constitution designates the president as commander in chief of the armed forces. But it gives Congress the power to “declare war.”

Why We Wrote This

Some members of Congress want to constrain President Donald Trump’s attacks on Iran, with votes occurring this week. But lawmakers have been diluting their oversight role for decades, and that history plays a role in the possible failure to get a war powers resolution through both the Senate and the House.

Congress has not done so since 1942. Experts agree that in recent decades, the institution has ceded much of the decisionmaking about war to the president. Many see that as a sidelining of the founding fathers’ system of checks and balances, although some think it’s more in line with what the founders envisioned.

Clark Neily, the senior vice president for legal studies at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute, says Congress does have mechanisms it can use to exert its power. Among them are withholding funds the president needs to take certain actions, or, as a last measure, voting to impeach a president who is overstepping their boundaries.

But, he says, the institution has to be willing to act.

Senate rejects bill to curb Trump on Iran. That fits a long pattern on war powers.

In the press briefing room at the White House, a television monitor shows U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement on the day the United States and Israel led attacks on Iran, in Washington, D.C., February 28, 2026.

“When Congress is either unwilling or unable to exercise those powers – as ours clearly is – then regardless of what the Constitution says, there’s no real practical limit on the president’s ability to unilaterally involve us in foreign military conflicts,” he says.

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