Senate advances war powers resolution to stop Trump from taking further military action in Venezuela
The US Senate on Thursday advanced a bipartisan war powers resolution to prevent Donald Trump from taking further military action against Venezuela, after he ordered a weekend raid to capture that country’s president, Nicolás Maduro, without giving Congress advance notice. The measure passed with 52 senators in favor and 47 opposed. All Democrats voted for the resolution, as did Republicans Rand Paul, Todd Young, Lisa Murkowski, Josh Hawley and Susan Collins. Should the Senate approve the measure, it will need to pass the House and be signed by Trump to take effect. The vote was a significant rebuke of the president, and Trump responded by saying that the Republican senators who supported the resolution “should never be elected to office again”. “This Vote greatly hampers American Self Defense and National Security, impeding the President’s Authority as Commander in Chief,” he wrote on Truth Social. Trump went on to call the War Powers Resolution, the Vietnam-war era legislation Congress passed to stop presidents from conducting unapproved wars, “unconstitutional”. The resolution introduced by the Democratic senator Tim Kaine requires Trump to seek permission before attacking or otherwise using the military against Venezuela. Following the Saturday raid that saw US special forces assault the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, and spirit Maduro to New York to face trial on charges related to “narco-terrorism”, the president said he did not tell lawmakers beforehand because “Congress has a tendency to leak”. That sparked outrage among Democrats and some Republicans, who argued that the raid was illegal, and risked plunging the United States into a prolonged conflict. “After the administration’s actions over the weekend, which resulted in several injuries to US service members … Congress needs to tell the American public where it stands,” Kaine said in a speech on the Senate floor on Tuesday. Concern over US involvement in Venezuela is “about an instinctive wisdom among the American people that says war should be a last resort and it shouldn’t be entered into upon the say-so of one person”, he added. The resolution was the latest to be proposed by Congress’s Democratic minority to halt Trump’s campaign against Venezuela’s government, which intensified in September when Trump approved airstrikes on boats off its coast that he alleges carried drugs. Those attacks have killed at least 110 people, though experts have disputed Trump’s claim that the vessels were carrying fentanyl to US shores. Controversy intensified after it emerged that the military opted to kill two survivors of a strike rather than take them captive. Previous war powers resolutions proposed in both chambers failed – albeit narrowly – to garner enough support from the Republican majority to advance. Many in the Republican party have praised Trump’s strikes on Venezuela as well as the rendition of Maduro as effective uses of US power. “The world is safer because Maduro is apprehended in the hands of the US justice system,” said Mike Johnson, the Republican House speaker, on Wednesday after the US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, and the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, briefed members of both chambers. Johnson added: “President Trump is a strong president who takes decisive action, and that sends an important message to other dangerous people, terrorists and tyrants around the world. I think that’s an important role for America to play.” Paul, the Kentucky senator who co-sponsored the resolution, and Murkowski of Alaska had been the only Republicans to consistently break with their party and support the earlier war powers attempts. In comments to reporters the day prior, Paul argued that Congress must assert its authority over waging war even when a military operation is successful, or risk allowing the country to be “run by emergency”. “The reason you argue on principle against even things that appear to be good … isn’t even always for the current president, it’s for the next president,” he said. Trump’s broadside swept up not just Collins, Murkowski and Paul – the few Republican senators who are known to defy the president – but also Young and Hawley, who have rarely opposed him. Following the vote, Hawley, who represents Missouri, said in a statement: “My read of the constitution is that if the president feels the need to put boots on the ground there in the future, Congress would need to vote on it.” Indiana senator Young noted that the resolution restrains future military actions and not the raid that captured Maduro, which the senator praised. “President Trump campaigned against forever wars, and I strongly support him in that position. A drawn-out campaign in Venezuela involving the American military, even if unintended, would be the opposite of President Trump’s goal of ending foreign entanglements,” he said. “The constitution requires that Congress first authorize operations involving American boots on the ground, and my vote today reaffirms that longstanding congressional role.” Asked by reporters at the Capitol about the president’s criticism, Young said he had “no concerns, and no comments”. The Democratic senator John Fetterman, who represents swing-state Pennsylvania, praised the Saturday attack as a “positive for Venezuela” but said he voted for the resolution “so we can continue this important debate on the floor of the Senate”. Kaine said he expected lawmakers to introduce other war powers resolutions intended to stop hostilities towards Nigeria, Cuba, Mexico and Colombia – all countries Trump has struck in the past year, or threatened to attack. Shortly after the Senate vote, a group of House Democrats introduced a similar war powers resolution dealing with Venezuela in that chamber. “Maduro was a horrible tyrant and a terrible human being. Nobody here disputes that. But when it comes to putting American troops in harm’s way, Congress is in charge, and that’s not me saying that, it’s the constitution,” said Jim McGovern, a congressman and the measure’s sponsor.





