Friday, May 1, 2026

Has the US-Iran ceasefire reset the clock on War Powers Act deadline?

Has the US-Iran ceasefire reset the clock on War Powers Act deadline?

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/1/has-the-us-iran-ceasefire-reset-the-clock-on-war-powers-act-deadline 

 

Has the US-Iran ceasefire reset the clock on War Powers Act deadline?

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth claims hostilities have ceased, but lawmakers say US forces remain active despite halted air attacks.


A digital billboard displays an image reading 'end the Iran war now' New York
A digital billboard displays an image reading 'end the Iran war now' in Times Square in New York, US, on April 30, 2026 [AFP]

The Donald Trump administration has argued that a key May 1 deadline it faces to secure congressional approval for the US-Israel war on Iran no longer matters because of the ongoing ceasefire with Tehran.

Once the president notifies the United States Congress about a war, he has a 60-day deadline under the War Powers Resolution to get lawmakers to greenlight the campaign or withdraw forces involved in hostilities.

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In the case of the war on Iran, that deadline expires on Friday.

But on Thursday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told lawmakers at a Senate hearing that the ongoing yet fragile ceasefire had effectively paused the clock on the deadline.

However, Hegseth’s interpretation is being strongly contested. Democratic lawmakers and legal experts argue that the statute contains no provision allowing for a pause once the deadline has started.

The disagreement reflects a deeper clash over how “hostilities” are defined, and whether a temporary ceasefire can alter legal obligations the White House is expected to adhere to.

So what is the Trump administration’s position on the War Powers Resolution, and how are the opposition and legal experts challenging it?

What has the Trump administration said?

During testimony before the US Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday, Hegseth argued the “60-day clock pauses, or stops” during a pause in fighting.

The US and Iran have largely halted direct attacks since April 8 as ceasefire negotiations began, though those talks have since stalled.

Since then, Tehran continues to effectively block the Strait of Hormuz and Washington has maintained a naval blockade of Iranian ports and ships in the strait. President Trump has repeatedly warned that strikes could resume.

Other officials in the Trump administration have echoed Hegseth, arguing that the absence of active exchanges since early April means hostilities have effectively ceased for the purposes of the War Powers Resolution and that the 60-day deadline may therefore no longer apply.

US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth testifies during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the Department of Defense budget request for Fiscal Year 2027 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on April 30, 2026. (Photo by Alex Wroblewski / AFP)
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth testifies during a Senate committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on April 30, 2026 [Alex Wroblewski/AFP]

“For War Powers Resolution purposes, the hostilities that began on Saturday, February 28, have terminated,” an official told the Reuters news agency.

“There has been no ⁠⁠exchange of ⁠⁠fire between US Armed Forces and ‌‌Iran since Tuesday, April 7.”

Moreover, some have suggested simply starting a new operation under a new name to get around the deadline. Richard Goldberg, who served as director for countering Iranian weapons of mass destruction for the US National Security Council during Trump’s first term, said he has recommended to administration officials that they simply transition to a new operation, which he suggested could be called “Epic Passage”, a sequel to Operation Epic Fury — the name of the current operation against Iran.

That new mission, he told The Associated Press news agency, “would inherently be a mission of self-defence focused on reopening the strait while reserving the right to offensive action in support of restoring freedom of navigation”.

“That to me solves it all,” Goldberg added.

What the War Powers Act requires

The War Powers Resolution, passed in 1973, places limits on how long a US president can wage war without congressional approval.

Under the law, the president must notify Congress within 48 hours of introducing US forces into hostilities. From that point, a 60-day clock begins. Though the US and Israel launched their current war on Iran on February 28, the Trump administration notified Congress on March 2, which is why the 60-day deadline expires on May 1.

Within those 60 days, the president must either secure authorisation from Congress — through a joint resolution passed by the House and the Senate — or end US military involvement.

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The law does allow for a limited 30-day extension, but only to safely withdraw forces, not to continue combat operations indefinitely.

However, the statute, which was designed to restrict presidential war-making powers after Vietnam, has been ignored or challenged by past presidents, who have argued parts of the law are unconstitutional.

The Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) is another possible legal foundation for continuing military operations, as it grants the president authority to deploy force for defined objectives.

It was originally enacted in 2001 following the September 11 attacks to allow the US to carry out its so-called “war on terror”, and then reaffirmed in 2002 to remove Saddam Hussein and authorise the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Since then, successive administrations have relied on these authorisations to support a broad range of military actions.

Due to deep divisions between Democrats and Republicans, Congress is unlikely to authorise continued military action against Iran.

On Thursday, a sixth bid in the Senate to curb Trump’s authority to conduct military operations using the War Powers Resolution was defeated by 50-47, with members voting overwhelmingly along party lines.

How are politicians reacting to Hegseth’s comments?

Democrats pushed back strongly against Hegseth’s claim, arguing there was no legal basis in the War Powers Resolution for pausing the 60-day countdown once a ceasefire begins.

At the hearing, Virginia Senator Tim Kaine rejected that interpretation outright, saying he did not “believe the statute would support that”.

Adam Schiff, a Democratic senator from California, also challenged the argument, pointing out that US forces remain active in the region despite the halt in air attacks. “Ceasing to use some forces while using others does not somehow stop the clock,” he noted.

Despite a halt in air and missile strikes, US and Iranian forces have continued hostilities in and around the Strait of Hormuz.

On April 20, the US military fired on and seized the Iranian‑flagged container ship Touska, with Tehran days later capturing two foreign commercial vessels.

Although nearly all Republicans voted down the War Powers Resolution on Thursday, Senator Susan Collins of Maine broke ranks to side with Democrats.

“The president’s authority as commander-in-chief is not without limits,” she said, pointing out that the 60-day deadline is “not a suggestion, it is a requirement”.

Has the ceasefire reset the clock, per experts?

Bruce Fein, a US constitutional and international law expert and former associate deputy attorney general, said the resolution “never says anywhere” that the 60-day deadline to receive congressional approval for military action “stops if there’s a ceasefire”.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Fein warned that such an interpretation “turns the resolution into simply a paper tiger”.

“You have to ask, why has President Trump not asked Congress to declare war? Just like in the Vietnam War, there was not any declaration of war there either, because he knows he would lose the vote,” he added.

The War Powers Resolution was passed after then-President Richard Nixon’s secret bombing of Cambodia, and more than a decade of war in Vietnam, despite his vetoing the resolution initially.

“Why would Mr Trump not ask Congress for a declaration if he thought it would pass? He has a majority in the House and the Senate. He knows he will lose,” Fein said.

“The War Powers Resolution is a sideshow. The real element here is that under Nuremberg International law principles adopted by Congress, we are engaged in a criminal war of aggression,” he added.


The Supreme Court’s attack on voting rights is already causing chaos

The Supreme Court’s attack on voting rights is already causing chaos

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/4/30/800030817/courts/the-supreme-courts-attack-on-voting-rights-is-already-causing-chaos/ 

 

The Supreme Court’s attack on voting rights is already causing chaos

UNITED STATES - OCTOBER 15: Voting rights activists protest outside the U.S. Supreme Court as the court prepares to hear arguments in a case challenging Louisiana's congressional map in Washington on Wednesday, October 15, 2025. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call via AP Images)
Attribution: APVoting rights activists protest outside the U.S. Supreme Court as the court prepares to hear arguments in a case challenging Louisiana’s congressional map in Washington on, Oct. 15, 2025.

The fallout from the Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais has been as quick as it was inevitable. Justice Samuel Alito’s reprehensible 6-3 decision functionally killed the tiny bits of the Voting Rights Act that we were clinging to in the face of Chief Justice John Roberts’ decades-long crusade to end the VRA. 

Louisiana wasted no time taking a victory lap, with Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill issuing a joint statement that the state was postponing its primaries even though early voting was already scheduled to begin on May 16. 

In theory, Purcell v. Gonzalez, a 2006 Supreme Court decision, bars this sort of last-minute change to elections, the idea being that if election rules are changed too close to an election, that can result in voter confusion. However, conservative judges and justices have essentially turned this into “Purcell for thee but not for me.” Already-gerrymandered states like Georgia and North Carolina get the go-ahead to muck around close to elections, but for potential election changes that would enfranchise, rather than exclude, voters, somehow Purcell kicks in then. 

A cartoon by Clay Bennett depicting a voting location with a sign that says, "early voter suppression here."
Attribution: Clay Bennett/Tribune Content AgencyA cartoon by Clay Bennett.

“This is going to cause mass confusion among voters—Democrats, Republicans, white, Black, everybody,” said Louisiana state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents the New Orleans area, reported the AP. “What they’re effectively doing is changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s rigging the system.”

Who knows what sort of chaos has been unleashed in Louisiana, but it’s definitely not great. Roughly one-third of Louisiana’s population is Black, but the state didn’t send a Black member to Congress until 1990, and when the Callais case began in 2022, there was still only one Black House member. Well, the Supreme Court seems to have ensured that in the future, that number will be zero. 

Elsewhere, Alabama’s Republican attorney general, Steve Marshall, is hyped to find out that Alabama might have a green light to discriminate. Get excited! “The Court rightly acknowledged that the South has made extraordinary progress, and that laws designed for a different era do not reflect the present reality.”

This is, to put it bluntly, a straight-up lie. The South has not made extraordinary progress. Instead, ever since 2022’s Shelby County v. Holder, which gutted a different part of the VRA, Black voter turnout has decreased, and the racial gap has widened. This decision will weaken Black and Hispanic turnout and representation even further, which was always the point. 

Alabama hasn’t yet moved to redraw its maps, but they’re going to, and the GOP is no doubt thanking its lucky stars that this latest decision seems to implicitly reverse the 2023 Allen v. Milligan Supreme Court decision which had held that Alabama’s map diluted Black voting power. The state has been fighting that decision ever since and is currently barred from redrawing its districts until 2030, but hey, that can be solved by a quick little trip to the Supreme Court or something, can’t it?

Over in Texas, the state doesn’t really have to do anything because the Supreme Court already blessed its new maps openly designed to ensure a perpetual white GOP majority, which seems to be the only type of redistricting that is allowable now. 


Related | How Democrats plan to fight the Supreme Court’s racist ruling


But hey, President Donald Trump is happy, and he’s the main client not just for the Department of Justice these days, but also for the conservatives on the Supreme Court who tenderly protect and approve almost everything Trump wants. The president immediately declared this was the “kind of ruling I like” and “a BIG WIN for Equal Protection under the Law.”

It’s a big win for John Roberts and it’s also a big win for the neo-Confederates who want to wipe out the Reconstruction Amendments and have a court happy to help. For everyone else, it’s a huge loss. Democrats are gearing up to fight fire with fire and do some on-the-fly redistricting, and they’re right to do so, but ultimately this sort of thing is corrosive and bad for democracy. John Roberts knows it. Samuel Alito knows it. Trump definitely knows it, and it’s exactly the future they want. 

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