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On Wednesday, Senate Republicans successfully blocked a war powers resolution aimed at preventing President Trump from deploying military forces “within or against” Venezuela. The resolution’s defeat came after two Republican senators, who had previously supported advancing the measure, reversed their stance under significant pressure from the president.
Senators Josh Hawley of Missouri and Todd Young of Indiana decided to back a procedural objection against the resolution. Their change in position followed a strong backlash from President Trump, who had called for their removal from the Senate after they initially opposed his stance last week.
This shift highlights Trump’s considerable sway over GOP lawmakers, particularly on high-stakes votes. Last week, the Senate had voted to move the bipartisan resolution out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, with five Republicans, including Hawley and Young, supporting the motion.
President Trump’s reaction was swift and vehement. He took to social media to demand the political downfall of the five Republican senators who had crossed him. The president also personally reached out to these lawmakers, expressing his disapproval through heated phone calls.
That action provoked an angry response from Trump who called on social media for the defeat of all five Republicans who broke with him. The president followed up with heated phone calls to those lawmakers.
Hawley said earlier on Wednesday that he decided to withdraw his support from the resolution after Secretary of State Marco Rubio assured him that U.S. troops are not present in Venezuela and that the administration would seek congressional authorization before deploying U.S. troops to the country.
Young told reporters right before the vote that he was swayed by Rubio’s pledge not to deploy troops to Venezuela without congressional authorization.
“I will not be supporting the Kaine war powers resolution. I have secured from the administration fairly extensive personal assurances related to our future intentions in Venezuela. I’ve secured from them a letter, which will be posted online … indicating that prior to the major military operations in Venezuela the administration will come to Congress prior to for a formal authorization,” he said.
“I’ve secured from Secretary of State Rubio, personally, that he’ll appear before the Foreign Relations Committee [later this month] to discuss this very topic,” he added. “It’s been a real point of emphasis of mine that we need public scrutiny of these sorts of operations and need to involve the public.”
Their votes gave Senate Republican leaders what they needed to pass a point of order objection against the resolution raised by Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.
Trump lashed out at both Hawley and Young along with Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), who also voted to advance the measure last week.
“Republicans should be ashamed of the Senators that just voted with Democrats in attempting to take away our Powers to fight and defend the United States of America. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Rand Paul, Josh Hawley, and Todd Young should never be elected to office again,” he wrote on Truth Social after the vote.
Trump took another shot at Young, who is up for re-election in 2028, during a speech at the Detroit Economic Club.
“And then you have a gentleman from Indiana, Todd Young,” Trump fumed during his Tuesday speech. “You say, ‘Why are you voting against?’ They can’t give you an answer. They’re unable to give you an answer. It’s like, why are they against the attack on Venezuela? They’re against the attack after they found out. It was the most successful attack, probably.”
Hawley’s and Young’s votes to sustain Risch’s procedural objection to the resolution left the Senate deadlocked 50-50.
Vice President JD Vance arrived at the Capitol shortly after 6 p.m. to cast the tie-breaking vote to defeat the measure.
Risch argued that the War Powers Act was not applicable to the situation in Venezuela because the United States does not have any military forces in the country at this time.
“What we are debating is trying to stop something that is not happening,” he said on the floor.
“We are attempting to direct the president to terminate the use of the United States Armed Forces for hostilities within or against Venezuela. Only Congress could dream this up,” he argued. “Currently, there are no U.S. forces engaged in hostilities in Venezuela.
He said Trump’s military mission this month to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was “limited in scope” and “short in duration.”
The successful vote to advance the measure last week came as a surprise.
Hawley and Young, a populist conservative and a traditional Republican defense hawk, respectively, joined three colleagues to discharge the resolution out of committee.