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- Sen. John Fetterman cast the deciding vote to block a resolution that would have limited the president’s ability to attack Iran.
- The resolution failed in a 48-47 vote, with several senators breaking ranks.
- The vote occurred the day before the U.S. and Iran signed a peace agreement.
Despite losing a staffer after a recent similar vote, U.S. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pennsylvania, again broke from his party and voted against advancing a war powers resolution, stopping the Senate from limiting President Donald Trump’s ability to attack Iran without restrictions.
On June 16, the U.S. Senate voted on a resolution that, if advanced, would have called for the removal of the U.S. military from hostilities with Iran that were not authorized by Congress. With Fetterman’s vote against the measure, the resolution failed 48-47. He has repeatedly voted against such measures, previously casting a deciding vote in May.
Five senators — Michael Bennet, D-Colorado; Josh Hawley, R-Missouri; Cory Booker, D-New Jersey; Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont; and Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky — abstained from voting. Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana; Susan Collins, R-Maine; Rand Paul, R-Kentucky; and Lisa Murkowski, R-Arkansas, broke from their party to vote in favor of the resolution.
What does Fetterman’s vote mean for war in Iran?
With Fetterman’s vote, nothing changes in Trump’s ability to order attacks on Iran.
But his vote came just a day before the U.S. and Iran signed a peace agreement, which calls for an immediate end to hostilities on all fronts and lays out expectations for the next round of talks between the two countries to address issues such as the future of Iran’s nuclear program.
Why does Fetterman keep blocking Iran war powers resolutions?
Fetterman has repeatedly said the Trump administration’s attacks on Iran were warranted in an effort to prevent the development of a nuclear weapon and to destroy the country’s theocratic regime.
“My vote no is not a pro-war vote. It's absolutely a pro-no nuclear Iran,” Fetterman told NewsNation earlier this month.
Iran’s regime still exists, now under new leadership. Trump told CBS News in March that Iran’s “missiles are down to a scatter” and that the country had “nothing left in a military sense,” but military intelligence agencies have reported that Iran still has military capabilities, according to the New York Times.
In a Washington Post column in May, Fetterman spoke of the strikes in Iran, saying that “the leading state sponsor of terror should be held to account.”
“In the wake of the war in Gaza, Iran-backed Hamas and Hezbollah have ramped up their attempts to dismantle our ally,” he said. “I remained committed to fully backing the elimination of these terrorists and their leaders.”
Finch Walker is the Pittsburgh Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Contact Walker at FWalker@usatodayco.com. Instagram: @finchwalker_. X: @_finchwalker.
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