Six moderate pro-Israel House Democrats introduced a competing, weaker alternative to the Massie-Khanna war powers resolution (H.Con.Res.38), ahead of Thursday's House vote on whether Congress will assert authority over a war it did not authorise.
The mechanism is standard legislative engineering: provide members who face political pressure on war powers with something to vote for, so they can oppose the binding resolution while claiming they addressed the issue. The weaker alternative fragments the Coalition that would need to unite behind Massie-Khanna — the bipartisan resolution co-sponsored by Republican Thomas Massie and Democrat Ro Khanna — into a binding camp and a symbolic one. Members who might otherwise face a binary choice between supporting the president's unchecked war authority and voting to constrain it now have a third option that does neither.
Speaker Mike Johnson called limiting Trump's war authority 'frightening' — escalating from 'dangerous,' the word he used when the resolutions were first drafted . Johnson stated the House 'has the votes to defeat' war powers measures . The competing Democratic resolution makes that arithmetic more comfortable by giving wavering members an alternative that expresses concern without imposing constraint. Combined with the Senate's 47–53 rejection, Congress is positioned to register unease about the largest US military operation in over two decades while declining to exercise the constitutional authority the War Powers Resolution was written to preserve.
