
The Senate voted 46 to 51 on April 22 to defeat a war powers resolution that would have directed the president to withdraw US armed forces from hostilities against Iran without congressional authorization, marking Democrats’ fifth consecutive failure to advance the measure since the conflict began on February 28.
The Senate defeated the war powers resolution 46 to 51 on April 22, blocking for the fifth consecutive time a Democratic-led effort to require the president to seek congressional authorization before continuing military operations against Iran. The vote came one day after Trump extended the ceasefire indefinitely, but with no change in how any senator voted from the four prior attempts.
Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, who sponsored the resolution, argued on the Senate floor that Trump had pledged during his campaigns not to begin new foreign wars and that the conflict with Iran bore “many similarities to the Iraq war,” which ran from 2003 to 2011. “In both wars, we had zero plans for the days to come and failed to outline our specific goals. In both wars, we had zero strategy to get out. And in both wars, we had servicemembers dying overseas for a cause that Americans did not support,” Baldwin said. A Reuters and Ipsos poll of 4,557 US adults cited in congressional briefings found that 56% of Americans now oppose the war, including 40% of Republicans. The War Powers Resolution of 1973 requires US forces to be withdrawn from hostilities within 60 days unless Congress formally authorizes continued military engagement, a deadline that Stars and Stripes noted is set to arrive on April 28, potentially triggering a constitutional confrontation over executive war authority if Democrats force the issue.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said at the floor that “every day we hear new promises from the Trump administration, that victory has been achieved, that peace is at hand, that the costs are starting to come down, and every day we see the opposite.” Senators Chuck Grassley of Iowa, David McCormick of Pennsylvania, and Mark Warner of Virginia were absent from the vote. Three absent Republicans could have theoretically changed the outcome, but none had indicated prior to the session that they were wavering. Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts, who voted in favor, stated after the vote that thirteen US service members and over five thousand civilians across the Middle East have died in the war and that Congress never authorized it. Democrats have vowed to force the vote again next week, and every week after, as long as hostilities continue.
The Senate’s fifth rejection of the war powers resolution confirms that Trump retains full executive authority to continue military and naval operations against Iran without any formal legislative constraint, a dynamic that keeps the Strait of Hormuz situation and its macro implications fully in the president’s hands. As crypto.news has tracked, crypto prices have been trading in direct response to every Iran diplomatic signal, with Bitcoin falling 2% to $77,593 on April 23 as stalled peace talks and rising oil prices weighed on risk sentiment. The Senate’s unchanged position means that any resolution to the conflict remains entirely dependent on executive diplomacy rather than congressional pressure, leaving markets exposed to the same headline-by-headline volatility that has defined Bitcoin and energy pricing since the war began. As crypto.news documented, Iran’s proposal to charge oil tankers a $1 per barrel Bitcoin toll at the Strait of Hormuz had already directly wired the conflict into crypto market mechanics, and the Senate’s continued support for executive war authority ensures that dynamic remains in place.
Democrats are expected to bring the war powers resolution back to a Senate floor vote as early as next week, with the outcome widely expected to mirror the 46-51 result that has held across all five attempts.