
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted 50-47 on Tuesday to move forward with a resolution to force President Donald Trump to end the war in Iran, a breakthrough for the Democratic-led effort. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., who just lost his primary for renomination over the weekend after he faced opposition from Trump, voted “yes” to advance the measure, the first time he has done so after having repeatedly voted “no.
Main Idea: The Senate narrowly advanced a resolution that would force President Donald Trump to end U.S. military action in Iran, with enough Republican support to keep the effort alive for now.
Key Points:
A longer Iran war could keep US taxpayers paying for military costs and raise risks for oil prices, markets, and family budgets.
Tim Kaine’s resolution and GOP defections could give Congress more control over war decisions and lower the chance of an open-ended conflict.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central figure whose war policy and claimed legal position drive the article.
Party caucus driving the effort and unified in support aside from one member.
Mentioned as the next major hurdle for the measure.
Party caucus whose defections are central to the vote outcome.
Senate Minority Leader quoted framing the political significance of the vote.
Introduced the resolution that the article centers on.
Named Democrat singled out as the lone Democratic holdout.
Named Republican who crossed party lines and is part of the vote count.
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