Trump’s coalition of the gutless

Republicans in Congress passed on an opportunity to shed their leashes on Wednesday. Predictably, Rand Paul was Rand Paul in supporting a War Powers resolution for reining in Donald Trump’s war on Iran. John Fetterman was John Fetterman in opposing it (The New York Times):
Republicans on Wednesday blocked a measure that would limit President Trump’s power to continue waging war against Iran without congressional authorization, turning back a bid by Democrats to insist that Congress weigh in on a sweeping and open-ended military campaign.
The 53-to-47 vote against taking up the measure was almost completely along party lines, reflecting a deep partisan divide on the Iran war as the Senate delivered the first clear test of congressional resolve since the joint U.S.-Israeli strikes, Operation Epic Fury, began across Iran four days ago.
Senators Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, and Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky, tried to force action on the measure. They invoked a provision of the 1973 War Powers Act, which requires that resolutions to terminate offensive hostilities be considered under expedited procedures.
Mr. Paul was the only Republican leading the effort, and no other G.O.P. senators joined him in support of the measure.
Calling Congress “The Department of Waffling,” Punchbowl News explains that with few exceptions Republicans are content to sit on their hands through classified briefings rather than “hold public hearings or exert any immediate pressure on the Trump administration.”
This is the Trump administration, after all, so no lofty pretensions about planting democracy in the Middle East as in GW Bush’s Iraq War. No, this time the gausy military objective is “a paradigm shift.” The goal in Wednesday’s vote was for Republicans to “keep their hands clean on the conflict for as long as possible” (Punchbowl News):
“Ultimately, if we can prevail here — in weeks, not months — take away [Iran’s] offensive capability, get these other countries working with us, this is a chance to change the paradigm and hopefully end this 20-year global war on terror,” Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.) said, noting that Iran is “at its weakest point.”
“Weeks, not months” is the key line here. Hoeven was speaking for most Republicans on this. Nobody knows how long the bombing campaign against Iran will last, and another war powers vote could be triggered — as Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) has threatened to do. Republicans would prefer to keep their hands clean on the conflict for as long as possible, especially given the uncertainty over how long this could last and how it’ll play politically.
Especially since midterm elections are eight months close. Taking any responsibility for Trump’s war or for fulfilling their constitutionally mandated role in approving wars is beyond them. That is unless and until they can do victory dances before November and take post hoc credit.
House Speaker Mike Johnson spun Trump’s illegal war of choice as Iran declaring war on us. “We’re not at war right now,” Johnson declared. Ours is an “operation.” Potted plants talk. Who knew?
“The same people who can’t agree on what to call it are the ones who launched it without a vote, without a plan, and without telling the truth,” Brian Allen on FKA Twitter offers. “They’re not confused. They’re hoping you are.”
Rolling Stone reports:
The fact that Donald Trump appears to have unilaterally volunteered America’s service members to go to war on Israel’s behalf has not gone over well with the president’s base. MAGA is in open revolt over the administration’s decision to attack Iran, and the internet is awash in memes depicting Trump as Netanyahu’s dog, among more graphic visual metaphors.
Criticism of the decision has been sharp and widespread — coming from both mainstream conservative commentators like Megyn Kelly, once steadfast MAGA warriors like Marjorie Taylor Greene, as well as from once-fringe alt-right figures like Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens, whose support Trump welcomed even as the broader Republican establishment shunned them over accusations of antisemitism.
Republicans don’t fear Iran as much as their MAGA base. The MAGA faithful know what they were promised, they know what they voted for, and they damn sure know what Trump has not delivered. Grocery prices are still high. Gas prices are set to rise. MAGA’s no foreign wars god king just launched one. And hell hath no “epic fury,” etc.
President Donald Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, is telling his advisers to bring ideas to the Oval Office to lower gasoline prices in the wake of the U.S. attack on Iran, according to two energy industry executives familiar with the conversations.
The White House is “looking under every rock for ideas on improving energy prices, especially gasoline prices,” said one of the executives, who was granted anonymity to describe internal administration discussions.
Perhaps they should look under the rocks where congressional Republicans are hiding?






