
Greg Landsman
Democrat, Ohio 1st (Cincinnati); flipped to support Iran WPR on 16 April after opposing it on 12 April.
Last refreshed: 17 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
What made Cincinnati's congressman flip on the Iran War Powers Resolution?
Timeline for Greg Landsman
Flipped from opposing the 12 April version to supporting this one
Iran Conflict 2026: House blocks WPR 213 to 214- Who is Greg Landsman and what district does he represent?
- Greg Landsman is a Democratic congressman representing Ohio's 1st district covering Cincinnati. He was elected in 2022 by defeating 13-term Republican Steve Chabot.Source: Wikipedia / Greg Landsman
- Why did Greg Landsman flip his vote on the Iran war powers resolution?
- Landsman voted against the 12 April WPR but supported the 16 April version. With Juan Vargas and Henry Cuellar also flipping, the defeat margin shrank to one vote (213-214).Source: DB event 2497
Background
Greg Landsman is the Democratic US Representative for Ohio's 1st congressional district, covering Cincinnati. He was one of three Democrats — alongside Juan Vargas and Henry Cuellar — who flipped from opposing the 12 April Iran War Powers Resolution to supporting the 16 April version, helping narrow the defeat margin to 213-214, the closest House vote of the conflict.
Born on 4 December 1976, Landsman holds a Master's degree in theological studies from Harvard Divinity School. Before Congress he led the StrivePartnership and the Preschool Promise early childhood education initiative in Cincinnati, then served on Cincinnati City Council from 2018 to 2022. He was first elected to Congress in 2022, defeating 13-term Republican incumbent Steve Chabot with 53 per cent of the vote. His district, which covers the Cincinnati metro area, is a competitive swing seat. Landsman sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee and is a member of the Problem Solvers Caucus and the New Democrat Coalition.
Landsman's WPR flip places him in a moderate cohort that has concluded the absence of any Iran executive instrument warrants invoking the 60-day constraint regardless of the underlying policy. His Problem Solvers Caucus membership signals a preference for bipartisan mechanisms; his theological background at Harvard Divinity School is occasionally cited by colleagues as informing his stated concern about the humanitarian cost of the conflict. His Cincinnati district's 2022 swing margin makes his vote electorally legible as well as principled.