The United States House of Representatives has just done something remarkable. It has remembered the Constitution exists. On Thursday, the House voted 224 to 194 to pass a resolution limiting President Donald Trump’s ability to wage war against Iran without explicit congressional approval. This is not a matter of partisan squabbling, though of course the vote fell largely along party lines. This is a matter of the Roman Senate suddenly noticing the Praetorian Guard has been running the empire for too long.
Let us be clear about what this resolution is not. It is not a binding law. It is a formal expression of opinion, a political hand grenade lobbed in the direction of the White House. But it carries a weight that transcends its legal status. For three years, the executive branch has treated the war power as a personal prerogative, a toy to be brandished at rallies or in the middle of the night after a drone strike. The President has bombed Syria, escalated in Afghanistan, and nearly stumbled into a full-scale conflict with Iran after ordering the assassination of General Qasem Soleimani. Each time, he invoked the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, a blank cheque written after 9/11 that has been stretched to cover targets from Yemen to the Horn of Africa. The resolution demands that the President terminate any hostilities against Iran unless Congress declares war or passes a specific authorization. It is, in essence, a demand that the republic act like a republic again.
Now, the critics will say this is just political theatre, a show for the anti-war left and the establishment right who fear the chaos of a new Middle Eastern quagmire. They will point out that the Senate will not take it up. They will argue that the President will veto it and that the only real effect is to weaken America’s negotiating position. This is the usual fetishisation of decisiveness, the cult of the strongman that has infected our political culture. But historical cycles show that such restraints are not meaningless. The War Powers Resolution of 1973 was passed over a veto. It has been violated repeatedly, but it created a norm. It established that Congress had a voice. When the House passes this resolution, it sends a signal to the bureaucratic state, to the military, and to foreign capitals. It says the imperial presidency is not absolute. It says the United States is not a monarchy.
Consider the alternative. Without this resolution, the President could order a full-scale invasion of Iran tomorrow. He could launch airstrikes on nuclear facilities. He could start a war that would dwarf Iraq and Afghanistan in casualties and cost. And he could do it all with the flimsiest of legal cover. The intelligence behind the Soleimani strike is still murky. The justification, an imminent threat, has been widely disputed even within the national security community. The House is doing what the Senate should have done long ago: insisting on a debate, on a vote, on the consent of the governed.
There is a deeper rot here. The United States has not declared war since World War II. Every conflict since, from Korea to Kosovo, has been waged under the thin guise of UN resolutions, NATO treaties, or congressional authorizations that were passed decades ago. This is intellectual decadence, a refusal to face the grim reality that war is a decision, not an accident. We have outsourced the awful responsibility of killing and dying to an executive branch that treats it as a routine administrative action. The Founders, who knew the corruptions of power intimately, deliberately placed the war power in Congress. They knew that a single man with an army is a tyrant. They also knew that a president who can start a war without consent is already a king in all but name.
The resolution will probably die in the Senate. Mitch McConnell will bury it. The President will tweet insults. But the seed has been planted. The idea that the imperial presidency can be rolled back, that the legislature can reclaim its constitutional role, is now alive. This is the beginning of a long, ugly debate about what America wants to be: a republic of laws or an empire of men. The House has chosen. It remains to be seen if the rest of the country will follow.












