The US Senate rejected the fifth War Powers Resolution (WPR) motion 51-46 on Wednesday 22 April, tighter than the fourth vote's 47-52 margin 1. Senator John Fetterman crossed to Republicans; Senator Rand Paul crossed to Democrats. Three senators did not vote: Mark Warner, Chuck Grassley and David McCormick. The WPR is the 1973 statute that requires the President to withdraw forces from hostilities within 60 days absent a congressional Authorisation for Use of Military Force (AUMF) or a declaration of war.
The operative legal deadline is Friday 1 May 2026, not 29 April as this briefing and several wires previously carried 2. The 60-day clock runs from Trump's formal congressional notification filed on 2 March, 48 hours after the 28 February strikes, not from the strike date itself. Administrative-law convention supports the later reading; the legal question has not been adjudicated. The correction adds 48 hours to a deadline stack that no longer contains a separate Lebanon trigger after Trump's 23 April extension.
Senator Lisa Murkowski is separately drafting an AUMF aimed at "greater disclosure, greater transparency." Senator Josh Hawley, whose earlier AUMF push was the loudest Republican pressure on the White House, now says Trump is "trending toward let's end this without further involvement" and is not backing Murkowski. Senators Thom Tillis and Susan Collins signal potential movement.
The WPR mechanism is the one institutional surface that responds to paper rather than social-media posts. If 1 May passes without a certified extension or an AUMF vote, the war continues under the same Truth Social scaffolding it has used since March, but the statutory breach becomes the first enforcement question a future administration or court can reach without Iran-specific discovery. Democrats have filed eight further resolutions eligible for future votes, so the procedural runway extends into May even as the legal one closes.
