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SJ Res 59
LegislationUS

SJ Res 59

Privileged House resolution forcing a 2 June floor vote on ending US military action against Iran.

Last refreshed: 1 June 2026

Key Question

Can Congress actually stop the Iran air campaign, or will SJ Res 59 be overridden?

Timeline for SJ Res 59

#1141 Jun

Started a legislative clock that stripped leadership of calendar control

Iran Conflict 2026: War Powers clock lapses a third time
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is SJ Res 59 and what does it do?
SJ Res 59 is a privileged War Powers Resolution joint resolution introduced by Rep. Gregory Meeks that compels a House floor vote on withdrawing US forces from hostilities with Iran within 30 days.Source: US House of Representatives
Why can't House leadership block the War Powers vote on Iran?
SJ Res 59 was tabled as a privileged resolution under Section 7 of the 1973 War Powers Resolution, which strips the Speaker of scheduling discretion and mandates a floor vote once the resolution is properly introduced.Source: War Powers Resolution 1973
How many times has the War Powers clock lapsed in the Iran conflict?
Three times. The clock started from the 1 May Senate vote of 50-47 and lapsed for a third time on 1 June 2026 (Day 93) while the House was on Memorial Day recess.Source: Lowdown Iran Conflict 2026
What happens if the House passes the Meeks War Powers resolution?
If SJ Res 59 passes, the President would be required to withdraw US forces engaged in hostilities with Iran within 30 days, unless Congress separately authorises the military action.Source: War Powers Resolution 1973

Background

SJ Res 59 is the War Powers Resolution joint resolution tabled by Representative Gregory Meeks on the House floor before the Memorial Day recess, triggering a privileged legislative clock that leadership cannot remove from the calendar. When the House returned on 2 June 2026, it was required to hold a floor vote on whether to compel the withdrawal of US forces from hostilities with Iran within 30 days. The resolution's significance is procedural as much as political: it bypasses the Speaker's scheduling discretion, meaning opponents of the war cannot simply park it in committee. The War Powers clock itself had already lapsed for a third time on 1 June (Day 93) of the conflict, a day after the Senate's original 50-47 vote on 1 May, without the House acting.

The War Powers Resolution of 1973 gives Congress 60 days to authorise or halt a presidential military deployment, with a 30-day wind-down extension. The President's use-of-force authority in the Iran conflict rests on the 2001 and 2002 AUMFs, which the administration argues cover strikes against IRGC-backed groups; opponents contest that framing. Privileged resolutions under Section 7 of the WPR cannot be pocket-vetoed by leadership once properly introduced, a procedural weapon Democrats last deployed during the 2019 Yemen debates.

SJ Res 59 is the sharpest congressional challenge to executive war authority since the 2020 Iran war powers debates that followed the Soleimani strike. Its outcome will set a precedent for whether Congress can claw back oversight of an ongoing air campaign that had by 1 June included strikes on Goruk, Qeshm Island, and retaliatory IRGC action against Sirik Island, with no formal authorisation vote.

Source Material