Lack of a scheduled Senate vote and procedural hurdles in Congress drive the 79% implied probability that no Iran war powers resolution will pass by April 30, reflecting trader consensus on stalled momentum. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) introduced the measure on April 16 to require congressional approval for U.S. hostilities against Iran, but it remains referred to the Foreign Relations Committee without hearings or leadership backing from Majority Leader Schumer. No companion bill advances in the House under Speaker Johnson, amid partisan divides over Iran policy following recent Israel-Iran tensions. Historical precedents, like narrow 2020 Senate passage without House action, underscore base rates of failure for such resolutions absent broad bipartisan urgency.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedLegislation will qualify as seeking to limit U.S. armed forces military action in the recent US/Israel–Iran conflict if it explicitly seeks to restrict, terminate, or require congressional approval for U.S. armed forces’ hostilities, strikes, deployments, or other military operations against Iran or its proxy forces. Non-binding statements or measures that express disapproval, call for investigation, or otherwise relate to the US/Israel-Iran conflict without seeking to limit military action will not qualify.
A measure amended by either chamber will only qualify if the amended version is subsequently finally passed by both chambers in identical form.
The resolution sources will be official congressional voting records and a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 24, 2026, 4:53 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Legislation will qualify as seeking to limit U.S. armed forces military action in the recent US/Israel–Iran conflict if it explicitly seeks to restrict, terminate, or require congressional approval for U.S. armed forces’ hostilities, strikes, deployments, or other military operations against Iran or its proxy forces. Non-binding statements or measures that express disapproval, call for investigation, or otherwise relate to the US/Israel-Iran conflict without seeking to limit military action will not qualify.
A measure amended by either chamber will only qualify if the amended version is subsequently finally passed by both chambers in identical form.
The resolution sources will be official congressional voting records and a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Lack of a scheduled Senate vote and procedural hurdles in Congress drive the 79% implied probability that no Iran war powers resolution will pass by April 30, reflecting trader consensus on stalled momentum. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) introduced the measure on April 16 to require congressional approval for U.S. hostilities against Iran, but it remains referred to the Foreign Relations Committee without hearings or leadership backing from Majority Leader Schumer. No companion bill advances in the House under Speaker Johnson, amid partisan divides over Iran policy following recent Israel-Iran tensions. Historical precedents, like narrow 2020 Senate passage without House action, underscore base rates of failure for such resolutions absent broad bipartisan urgency.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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