

The administration is wrong to claim that the 60-day time limit in the Act is "stops" due to the ongoing ceasefire. | 5.1.2026 4:20 PM Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. (Kyodonews/Zuma Press/Newscom) In my March 5 Dispatch article on the Iran War and the Constitution, I explained why Donald Trump's initiation of the war without congressional authorization is unconstitutional. As of today, it is also in violation of the War Powers Act of 1973. Enacted in the wake of the Vietnam War, the WPA requires the president to secure congressional approval within 60 days of entering U.S. troops into "hostilities" or situations "where imminent involvement in hostilities is clearly indicated by the circumstances." The president can seek a 30 day extension without additional congressional authorization, but Trump has not done so in this case. The sixty day deadline expires today. Therefore, Trump is now in violation of the WPA, as well as the Constitution. Yesterday, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth claimed that the WPA clock "stops" because of the ongoing ceasefire with Iran, curently still (tenuously) in effect. But the WPA doesn't just apply to situations where US forces are in active combat. It also applies "where imminent involvement in
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