2 min read

I am writing to express my distress about Rep. Jared Golden’s vote against the recent War Powers Resolution — especially as his choice aligns him with the half of Congress that refuses to do its job. 

Golden’s stated rationale — that the resolution risked undermining U.S. leverage and would impose an abrupt halt — doesn’t adequately address the most vital issue: the need for Congress to assert its constitutional authority when an administration is making potentially dangerous and unconstrained military decisions.

The War Powers framework exists precisely for moments like this — when executive action risks outpacing deliberation and accountability. Deferring to a 60-day window, especially in a volatile context, effectively cedes Congress’ role at the very point it is most needed. Waiting for clearer conditions or a more orderly process may sound prudent, but in practice it risks normalizing unilateral escalation and continues to place more troops and civilians at increased risk arising from faulty executive branch-driven decisions. 

His vote may have been intended as a measured, process-based position. However, given the narrow margin, it had the actual effect of enabling continued executive action without additional congressional constraint. That outcome is difficult to reconcile with a commitment to checks and balances.

Golden’s willingness to diverge from party lines may have been admirable at times, but independence shouldn’t come at the expense of congressional responsibility in matters of war.
He should reconsider his position and support clear, enforceable limits on military engagement moving forward, including explicit authorization requirements and defined boundaries on escalation.

James Cogan
Lewiston

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