Senator Lisa Murkowski confirmed on the Senate floor that she will introduce her Iran Authorisation for Use of Military Force (AUMF) when the chamber returns from recess on 11 May, the deadline she set the administration to produce a credible plan . 1 Todd Young of Indiana joined Susan Collins of Maine, John Curtis of Utah, and Thom Tillis of North Carolina as the fourth Republican co-sponsor by 3 May.
An AUMF is the statutory instrument by which Congress authorises the use of military force; the most recent broad authorisation was the 2001 post-9/11 AUMF, which has since been stretched across four administrations. Murkowski said the bill "recognises reality that US military is already engaged and provides structure and clarity". The framing is procedural rather than substantive; the AUMF is being marketed as a constraint Congress imposes on existing operations, not a blank cheque for new ones.
Senate Iran-related WPR motions in the past decade have rarely commanded more than two Republican signatures pre-filing; Murkowski has four before the AUMF reaches paper. Young's Indiana base sits closer to the defence-hawk register than the Collins-Murkowski-Curtis-Tillis profile, which means the coalition reaches into the chamber's mainstream rather than its libertarian-moderate fringe.
The arithmetic still does not close. The 30 April Iran WPR motion failed 47-50 , with Collins the first Republican supporter . Four committed Republicans against the chamber that delivered 47 per cent on 30 April leaves the bill at least three votes short of passage at filing, before counting Democratic defections. Murkowski's 11 May filing date arrives one week after Project Freedom is operational; the floor pressure cycle now runs directly on top of the first kinetic test of the escort mission. Missing the date for a third time would damage Murkowski's credibility as a procedural anchor; filing on schedule is the first hard test of whether the floor coalition is real.
