The Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted 213-214 Today to reject a resolution that would have directed President Donald Trump to withdraw U.S. forces from military operations against Iran. The margin was the narrowest possible, and the outcome broke almost entirely along party lines.
Only one Republican, Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, voted in favor of the resolution. Only one Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, voted against it. Rep. Warren Davidson of Ohio, who had supported a similar measure previously, voted present. Three other Republicans did not vote at all. Had any one of them voted yes, the result would have been different.
What the resolution would have done
The measure was introduced by Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York. It sought to invoke the War Powers Resolution, directing the president to end U.S. military engagement with Iran except under specific circumstances that would require explicit authorization from Congress. Supporters argued the military campaign was launched without congressional approval and has continued without a defined objective or exit strategy.
Meeks argued during floor debate that the ongoing engagement represented precisely the kind of open-ended military commitment the War Powers Resolution was written to prevent. He warned that continued delay brought the country closer to a deeper conflict with no clear path out.
A Senate vote pointed in the same direction
The House vote followed a similar outcome in the Senate, where a measure to end the Iran war was blocked 52-47. Nearly every Republican senator voted to allow the military campaign to continue without constraints. All but one Democrat voted in favor of ending it. The parallel results in both chambers reflect how thoroughly the Iran question has sorted along partisan lines, with Republican lawmakers largely deferring to Trump’s military strategy despite rising public pressure.
What the polls are showing
The political ground beneath that deference is shifting. A CBS News poll found that 60% of Americans disapprove of U.S. military actions in Iran. The same poll showed 64% disapprove of Trump’s handling of the situation, and 62% said they do not believe he has a clear plan for military engagement in the region.
Those numbers carry particular weight as the 2026 midterm elections approach. Some Republicans have begun expressing concern privately about the economic consequences of the war, including a surge in gas prices and rising costs for diesel and fertilizer. Those pressures fall heavily on rural and working-class voters who make up a significant portion of the Republican base, and several party members have acknowledged that the war’s financial impact could affect their standing at the polls.
A one-vote margin that will not be forgotten
The closeness of Today’s vote ensures the Iran war resolution will return. One abstaining Republican voting yes would have changed the outcome. The fact that three Republicans chose not to vote at all will not go unnoticed by colleagues on either side of the debate.
The resolution’s defeat does not end the conversation. It simply means the conversation continues under the same conditions that produced the vote in the first place, with a war the public increasingly opposes, an economy feeling the cost of it, and a midterm election drawing closer with each week that passes.

