House leadership pulled its war-powers vote before the Memorial Day recess and rescheduled it to early June, so the chamber stays out of the building until Tuesday 2 June 2026 . The 30-day wind-down clock under the War Powers Resolution, the 1973 statute that is meant to force a congressional vote on undeclared wars, lapses on Monday 1 June. For the reader that means the war on Iran runs on with no congressional authorisation and no realistic route to one before mid-June.
A war-powers measure reaches the President only after both chambers pass matching text. The Senate is set to hold its floor vote on 1 June on the resolution sponsored by Senator Tim Kaine, the Virginia Democrat, advanced from committee 50-47 on 20 May . The absent House supplies no matching version, so the Senate vote produces a half-measure the President never has to receive. Leadership cancelled the House vote as Republicans neared losing it , and the calendar finished the job.
This repeats the pattern set on 29 April, when the first 60-day clock ran out with no third floor vote . The Administration argues the wind-down clock never started at all: Pete Hegseth, the US Secretary of War, told the Senate that Article 2 of the Constitution overrides any authorisation requirement. Kaine and the four Republicans who crossed reject that reading and hold the 1973 statute to a fixed clock regardless of how the White House labels the conflict 1.
The War Powers Resolution clock binds the executive, yet only Congress can stop the clock, and Congress controls its own calendar. Scheduling a recess across the 1 June expiry is the statute working as written for a body that does not want to act. Any House vote after 2 June governs a period already spent, which makes it a statement rather than a constraint.
