NORTON META TAG

20 June 2025

POLITIFACT WEEKLY: Does Donald Trump have sole power to decide if and when to strike Iran? Or does Congress have a say?, Fact-checks of the week, NY Comptroller Lander said ICE agents need judicial warrant to detain migrants and can’t arrest US citizens. Not quite., Happy Juneteenth!, Go deeper on the Israel-Iran conflict: How new would direct US action be?, Ask PolitiFact: Did Trump pulling US out of Iran deal lead to current conflict?, LISTEN: PolitiFact reporter talks Minnesota attack misinfo, Image of a man wearing a “Resist” shirt is, A Craigslist posting was looking for “seat fillers” at D.C. military parade. It’s False, The American flag was shown during New York Mets’ Pride Night national anthem, A TikTok user recorded video of a military helicopter, No, ICE agents didn’t raid a Los Angeles elementary school, Do you smell smoke? PANTS ON FIRE! 20JUN25

 


Does Donald Trump have sole power to decide if and when to strike Iran? Or does Congress have a say?

As President Donald Trump decides whether the United States military should participate in direct military action against Iran, a bipartisan group of lawmakers is saying that Congress should have a voice in the decision.

Some lawmakers from both parties have proposed legislation to require a say from Congress on whether to attack Iran, a scenario that has become plausible as Israel has pursued six days of attacks on Iran’s leadership, military assets and nuclear program.

U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., introduced a resolution cosponsored by several liberal Democrats that says Congress "directs the president to terminate the use of United States Armed Forces from hostilities against the Islamic Republic of Iran … unless explicitly authorized by a declaration of war or specific authorization for use of military force against Iran." Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., has introduced a similar resolution in the Senate.

Despite the cross-party constituency for slowing a U.S. attack on Iran, it’s unclear whether either chamber can muster a majority to pass such legislation.

If Congress doesn’t pass anything, it would continue a long-running divide between the president and Congress over who has the right to send U.S. troops into harm’s way.

How did the U.S. get to this point?

Since launching airstrikes June 13, Israel has set back Iran’s nuclear capabilities by damaging a uranium enrichment plant at Natanz and a site at Parchin where modeling was done for building nuclear weapons.

But analysts say that thoroughly curtailing Iran’s nuclear potential likely requires Israel to neutralize the heavily reinforced facilities at Fordo (sometimes spelled Fordow), where Iran’s most important uranium enrichment facility is buried deep under mountains about 125 miles south of Tehran.

That would require help from the U.S. Whether to militarily join a direct Israeli offensive against Iran — which would be unprecedented despite the historically close ties between the U.S. and Israel — is now in Trump’s hands.

The presidency vs. Congress

But does the president have sole power to decide if and when to strike? Or does Congress have a say? The reality is that there are "overlapping authorities," said Joshua C. Huder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Government Affairs Institute. 

Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution assigns the right to declare war to Congress. But the last time that happened was at the beginning of World War II, when Franklin Roosevelt was president.

Since then, presidents have generally initiated military activities using their constitutionally granted powers as commander in chief without having an official declaration of war in support of their actions.

Most controversially, in August 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson asked Congress to back his effort to widen the U.S. role in Vietnam. He received it with enactment of the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, which passed both chambers of Congress, including the Senate with only two dissenting votes.

As the Vietnam War turned sour, lawmakers became increasingly frustrated at their secondary role in sending U.S. troops abroad. So in 1973, Congress passed the War Powers Resolution, which was enacted over a veto by President Richard Nixon. 

The resolution required that, in the absence of a declaration of war, the president must report to Congress within 48 hours of introducing armed forces into hostilities and must terminate the use of U.S. armed forces within 60 days unless Congress permits otherwise. If approval is not granted and the president deems it an emergency, then an additional 30 days are granted for ending operations.

Presidents have not been eager to cede their presidential prerogatives to Congress. Presidents typically frame any entreaties to Congress about military force as a voluntary bid to secure "support" for military action — action that’s often under way or planned imminently — rather than as "permission."

In recent decades, congressional consent has usually been accomplished by the passage of an "authorization for the use of military force" — a legislative vehicle that "has become the modern version of a declaration of war," Cancian said. 

Presidents who have received such authorizing legislation include Ronald Reagan (to oversee the handover of the Sinai Peninsula from Israel to Egypt, and separately to participate in a deployment to Lebanon that ended with a suicide attack that killed 241 American service members); George H.W. Bush (to oust Iraq’s Saddam Hussein from Kuwait); Bill Clinton (for military action in Somalia); and George W. Bush (to enter Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks, and another to oust Hussein from power in what would become the Iraq War).

The post-9/11 authorization from 2001 is among the most controversial, because presidents of both parties have used its broad wording to support military action against a wide array of targets, using language that approves efforts "to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States."

Almost a quarter century later, the 2001 authorization remains in force, despite being repealed by the Senate in a bipartisan 66-30 vote in 2023. (The House did not concur.)

What could be next?

During his second term as president, Trump has maintained strict discipline within his party. However, the issue of going to war overseas is one that could test Trump’s degree of support. Some high-profile figures within Trump’s MAGA movement oppose an Iran attack and say they intend to hold Trump to his past rhetoric that he will keep the U.S. out of wars.

Ultimately, congressional reaction "is determined largely by the majority party," said Lance Janda, a military historian at Cameron University. So with Republican control of both chambers until at least 2026, "I don’t see Congress getting involved" any time soon.

— Louis Jacobson

ShareShare
TweetTweet
ForwardForward

Fact-checks of the week

  • Lee’s conspiracy theory. As the public waited for answers in the shootings of two Democratic lawmakers and their spouses, U.S. Mike Lee, R-Utah, promoted an unproven and inflammatory conspiracy theory about the suspect’s ideology. “This is what happens (w)hen Marxists don’t get their way,” Lee said of suspect Vance Boelter at about 11 a.m. ET June 15, from his personal X account. Pants on Fire! No available information about Boelter’s political beliefs signals that his beliefs were Marxist or left-leaning. People who knew Boelter told reporters he was politically right-leaning and voted for Trump. Law enforcement officials said all the potential targets Boelter had identified were elected officials and Democrats, and they discouraged people from making sweeping conclusions about Boelter’s ideology. 

  • Data clapbacks. Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., challenged three elected Republican officials from Alabama, Oklahoma and Arkansas who had criticized California and Newsom’s handling of the Los Angeles protests. Newsom said Alabama’s homicide rate was three times higher than California's; Oklahoma’s was 40% higher; and Arkansas’ rate was double. Data for 2022 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that California has a lower homicide rate than Alabama, Arkansas and Oklahoma, and roughly in the proportions that Newsom said. For violent crime more broadly — a category that includes rape, aggravated assault and robbery in addition to homicide — California fares less well, notching rates higher than either Oklahoma and Alabama. Our verdict: Mostly True.

  • On the streets, go by the law, not the tweets. Ahead of “No Kings” protests in Florida and around the country, Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., touted a 2021 anti-riot law "that if you’re driving on one of those streets and a mob comes and surrounds your vehicle and threatens you, you have a right to flee for your safety. And so if you drive off and you hit one of these people, that’s their fault for impinging on you.” A social media user said DeSantis was giving Floridians "a greenlight to run over protesters blocking them in the streets." Our story explains the exaggerations in both summaries. Bottom line: The 2021 law provides an affirmative legal defense for drivers who are later served with civil lawsuits related to a riot-related incident — but the law doesn’t protect them from facing criminal charges.
You're a current PolitiFact donor. Thank you so much for supporting our work! 
In now-deleted X posts, Sen. Mike Lee asserted that Vance Boelter, the suspect in an attack Democratic state lawmakers in Minnesota, was driven by “Marxist” ideology. Available evidence doesn’t support that idea. (YouTube)

NY Comptroller Lander said ICE agents need judicial warrant to detain migrants and can’t arrest US citizens. Not quite.

Plainclothes immigration officers arrested New York City Comptroller and mayoral candidate Brad Lander at an immigration court building June 17 as he tried to escort an immigrant after a hearing. Lander, who linked arms with the immigrant, repeatedly demanded to see a judicial warrant for the man’s arrest.

"I will let go when you show me the judicial warrant," Lander said as agents tried to physically separate Lander from the immigrant.

After Lander asked multiple times, one agent waved a piece of paper. "I have it in my hand right here," he said. Eventually, the agents forcefully separated Lander from the man, whom Lander later identified as Edgardo. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers pinned Lander to a wall and handcuffed him.

"You don’t have the authority to arrest U.S. citizens," Lander said.

We ran both points by legal and immigration experts.

ICE agents do not need a judicial warrant to detain immigrants in public. They are generally required to have an administrative warrant, which, doesn’t need to be signed by a judge and can be signed by immigration officials.

ICE agents generally can’t arrest U.S. citizens, because they aren’t committing a civil immigration violation. However, Lander wasn’t arrested on immigration grounds; the agent accused Lander of obstruction. According to U.S. law, immigration agents can arrest people "for any offense against the United States, if the offense is committed in the officer's or employee's presence."

— Maria Ramirez Uribe

Happy Juneteenth!

PolitiFact and Poynter were off yesterday in observation of Juneteenth, which marks the day in 1865 that Union troops landed in Galveston, Texas, and announced the end of slavery.

President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, but it wasn’t until two and half years later that it became a reality in Texas. The Civil War ended on April 19, 1865, but enslaved people in Texas didn’t learn of the confederacy’s surrender until two months later.

Former President Joe Biden signed a bill into law in June 2021 to make Juneteenth the 11th federal holiday. Here is background on how the occasion grew from informal community celebrations to becoming the first holiday added to the federal calendar since Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 1983. 

Go deeper on the Israel-Iran conflict: How new would direct US action be?

Whether the U.S. will take an active, offensive role in Fordo’s bombing is a question laden with strategic and geopolitical import. A specific offensive military action against a sovereign state by the United States — either through an offensive military collaboration with Israel, or with the U.S. acting alone against Iran for Israel’s benefit — would break with decades of precedent in the U.S.-Israel relationship.

Past collaborations between the U.S. and Israel have involved a layer of distance and plausible deniability. 

Since Israel’s founding in 1948, the U.S. has been a reliable ally, offering bipartisan rhetorical support, diplomatic cover, financial assistance, weapons, intelligence and — most recently — defensive support, including assistance with anti-missile technology as Iran has retaliated for Israeli attacks by sending barrages of missiles toward Israeli cities.

"The Biden administration collaborated with Israel, and other regional powers, in thwarting Iranian attacks" after Israel moved into Gaza after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in Israel, said Boaz Atzili, a professor of foreign policy and global security at American University. "Both Biden and Trump assisted against missiles launched from Yemen, and Trump even acted offensively against Yemen, before signing a separate agreement that precluded Israel."

Mark F. Cancian, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said he knows of many instances in which the U.S. provided indirect support for offensive Israeli operations.

"However, I cannot think of any example where the United States and Israel launched an offensive operation together," he said.

More context here.

— Louis Jacobson

Ask PolitiFact: Did Trump pulling US out of Iran deal lead to current conflict?

Trump has vowed to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon since announcing his candidacy in June 2015. During his first term, Trump withdrew the U.S. from the deal signed by his predecessor, President Barack Obama, and then broke his 2016 campaign promise to negotiate a new one.

As Trump considers the role of the U.S. in Israel’s efforts to take out Iran’s nuclear capabilities, readers sent us questions about the federal government’s past efforts to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

Some on the left are blaming Trump’s 2018 exit for Iran’s nuclear capabilities. "Now the world is reaping the whirlwind of his historic mistake," said Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass. 

It’s difficult to know exactly what Iran, the U.S. and other countries would have done if the agreement remained in place. Our explainer will get you up to speed on the basics.

— Amy Sherman

‘One Big’ ban on AI regulations?

State lawmakers have filed hundreds of bills to address artificial intelligence’s potential harms for child safety, learning, elections and more. 

Those laws wouldn't be possible for 10 years under the massive Trump-backed policy bill moving through Congress. It reached the Senate with a 450-word section prohibiting states from enforcing any law or regulation limiting or restricting AI for the next 10 years.

Lawmakers who support the provision said that a patchwork of state laws stifle innovation, and get in the way of U.S. competition with China. But the AI section drew bipartisan outcry after the House’s May 22 party-line vote. "I would have voted NO if I had known this was in there," Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wrote on X June 3.

Senators deliberating over the Republican-titled "One Big Beautiful Bill" have since proposed tying it to federal broadband funding.

We answered four questions about the bill’s aim and possible connection to broadband, China’s role, state reactions and affected regulations.

— Loreben Tuquero

LISTEN: PolitiFact reporter talks Minnesota attack misinfo 

PolitiFact Staff Writer Madison Czopek appeared on Minnesota Public Radio on Tuesday to discuss her Saturday night report about conservative misinformation that unfolded from influencers and lawmakers after the Minnesota shootings.

One rule of thumb:

“Slow down before you share anything and consider what is the source of this information,” she said. “Turn to trusted news sources as much as possible.”

Listen to the MPR News segment.

En Español: Cómo cuentas conservadoras en X promovieron teoría falsa implicando a Tim Walz en asesinato político

Quick links to more fact-checks & reports 

Do you smell smoke? 

Here's your Pants on Fire fact-check of the week: 
Images of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce at South Florida “No Kings” protest were faked with AI. Slop alert! 🚨👖🔥

See what else we've rated Pants on Fire this week. 
Thanks for making it this far! ICYMI, here's my column about the 10-year anniversary of Trump launching the MAGA movement from Trump Tower. I'm curious what, if anything, the milestone means to you. Send me an email with your thoughts and ideas for our coverage.

Katie Sanders
PolitiFact Editor-in-Chief
Send this link to your friends so they can sign up for this email!Send this link to your friends so they can sign up for this email!

No comments:

Post a Comment