Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced on 29 April that he would bring a sixth challenge to the uninstrumented Iran campaign under the WPR (the 1973 War Powers Resolution) 1. The fifth vote, taken on 22 April, failed 51-46 . Schumer's pledge converts the WPR from a single binary cliff into rolling weekly pressure ahead of the legal deadline.
That deadline is widely reported as Friday 1 May, the 60-day mark from the campaign's 28 February opening. Section 1544(b) of the WPR appends a 30-day force wind-down to the 60-day engagement limit, which the Friday-cliff reporting omits. The Office of Legal Counsel has historically read 1544(b) as permissive on troop withdrawal sequencing, not as a continuation of presidential authority; legal exposure begins not at the 60-day mark but at the moment the White House refuses to begin withdrawal. That date has not been set. The operative cliff therefore falls at roughly Monday 1 June, four weeks after the Friday number on every front page.
The procedural quirk reframes Lisa Murkowski's non-filing. She drafted an Iran AUMF (Authorisation for Use of Military Force) with Susan Collins, Thom Tillis and John Curtis as backers , , set herself a 28 April target to file , then let it slip , . Read against a Friday cliff that produces filed leverage; read against a 1 June cliff she is exactly where she wants to be. Filing the bill before the 60-day mark surrenders the negotiation; holding it through the 30-day wind-down keeps White House counsel at her staff's door. Tim Kaine is running the public side; Murkowski is running the private one.
For markets and procurement desks the practical implication is straightforward: insurance pricing, congressional staff allocation and Pentagon contingency planning need to operate on a month-long cliff, not a day-long one. The vote Schumer brings this week may force Republican defections beyond the existing four; it may fail at the 51-46 line; it may not happen until Friday morning. None of those outcomes touch the 1 June date that actually binds the President's options. Trump has four weeks to either sign something or run the war on the same uninstrumented terms it has run on since 28 February.
