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Iran Conflict 2026
22APR

Murkowski sets AUMF target for 11 May

3 min read
10:22UTC

Lisa Murkowski announced on 30 April 2026 that she would introduce her drafted Iran AUMF the week of 11 May if the White House did not present a 'credible plan' within seven days.

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Key takeaway

Murkowski's week-of-11-May AUMF target is conditional on no White House credible plan within seven days.

Senator Lisa Murkowski announced on 30 April 2026 that she would introduce her drafted Iran AUMF the week of 11 May 2026 if the White House did not present a "credible plan" within seven days. AUMF is the standard congressional instrument that would give statutory grounding to a war the Trump administration's 1 May statement says is not a war. The new target is two weeks later than the 28 April deadline she missed and now contingent on a White House response rather than a calendar tickover.

Susan Collins' first Republican Yes vote on the same day's WPR vote lowered Murkowski's political cost to file. The sequence runs Tillis-and-Collins backing the draft, then a procedural Republican Yes, then Murkowski's filing window opens covers the early Collins/Tillis endorsement. Murkowski is no longer the lone Republican defector on war-powers grounds, which changes the procedural risk on a floor vote that would otherwise have been a personal one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Senator Lisa Murkowski, a Republican from Alaska, has been working on a bill that would formally approve the Iran war, what is called an Authorisation for the Use of Military Force, or AUMF. Unlike the War Powers Resolution, which challenges the war's legality, an AUMF would actually give the president legal approval to continue fighting, but with conditions and limits set by Congress. Murkowski first said she would introduce the bill on 28 April. That date passed without a filing. On 30 April, she said she would introduce it the week of 11 May, but only if the White House did not present a 'credible plan' within seven days. The same day, fellow Republican Susan Collins voted against the White House on a separate war-powers vote for the first time. That gives Murkowski some political cover: she is no longer the only Republican challenging the administration on the Iran war's legal basis.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Collins' first Republican Yes on WPR (same day) lowers Murkowski's political cost to file the AUMF: she no longer acts as the sole Republican defector on war-powers grounds (ID:1).

  • Risk

    A third successive missed deadline, if the White House provides a nominal 'credible plan' by 7 May, would further reduce Murkowski's legislative credibility and potentially end the AUMF track entirely.

First Reported In

Update #85 · "Not at war": three claims, no treaty

Spectrum News· 1 May 2026
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