Washington — President Trump on Friday told congressional leaders that "hostilities" with Iran have "terminated," addressing a critical 60-day deadline under a law meant to limit the unauthorized use of military force. "There has been no exchange of fire between the United States Forces and Iran since April 7, 2026," the president wrote in nearly identical letters to House Speaker Mike Johnson and GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley, the president pro tempore of the Senate.
Main Idea: President Donald Trump told Congress that hostilities with Iran have ended, as his administration tries to avoid a War Powers deadline and keep U.S. military action going.
Key Points:
Ongoing Iran tensions can keep fuel and shipping costs high, raise market swings, and put more US troops at risk, which can worry households and businesses.
Trump’s claim that hostilities have ended could lower the chance of new strikes and give consumers and investors more short-term relief.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central figure who told Congress the Iran hostilities have terminated and whose War Powers position drives the story.
Named senator publicly challenging the administration’s legal interpretation and making a central counterargument.
Major official whose testimony and ceasefire argument are used to support the administration’s legal position.
Part of Congress implicated in the War Powers deadline and authorization dispute.
Central legislative body involved in the authorization deadline and oversight debate.
Venue for Hegseth’s testimony and part of the congressional oversight conflict.
Named congressional leader receiving Trump’s letter; relevant but not a central decision-maker in the article.
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Sign in to commentNamed congressional leader receiving Trump’s letter; included as a supporting political actor.