Senate Moves Toward Subpoena Power as Administration Maintains Silence
Summary
Congressional patience reached breaking point as the administration entered its fifth consecutive day without responding to the Senate briefing demand. Senate Foreign Relations Committee leadership signaled readiness to invoke subpoena authority after 47 senators received no acknowledgment of their classified briefing request. The legal authority challenge intensified as Armed Services Committee members joined Foreign Affairs in questioning reliance on post-9/11 authorizations. The stalled Trump-Netanyahu summit — now postponed three times — remained unscheduled, casting doubt on whether the meeting would occur at all.
What to Watch
- Subpoena authorization timeline — Senate Foreign Relations Committee may move as early as next week to compel administration officials to testify
- Armed Services Committee hearing schedule — legal authority debate spreading beyond Foreign Affairs
- House-Senate coordination — whether chambers align on constitutional challenge strategy
- Trump-Netanyahu meeting status — third postponement raising questions about summit viability
- Oil market response — Brent holding $88-89; political uncertainty weighing on price trajectory
- Hormuz demining updates — sole pathway for progress independent of stalled diplomacy
Sources
This report draws from Reuters, AP, BBC, CNN, Guardian, Foreign Policy, Axios, and Financial Times. All claims are attributed with inline source links above.
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