Having seen a successful Senate vote late last year and a successful House vote earlier this month both come to naught on ending the Yemen War, the Senate is reportedly planning to try again. Officials say that the fresh Senate bill will be introduced next week.
 To successfully get the bill to the White House, identical versions need  to pass in both the House and the Senate. Last year this was impossible  because the former House leadership kept changing the rules to duck  votes. This year, it may depend on whether or not they can keep Israel  out of it. 
 The original plan was for the February 13 House bill to get passed in  the Senate as is. But War Powers Act challenges have a specific  standing, which theoretically prevents leadership from blocking them.  The final House version, however, included an amendment praising Israel  and opposing BDS, and the Senate leadership argues that this makes it no  longer just a War Powers Act challenge, and strips it of its standing. 
 So the Senate is starting from scratch again, betting they can once  again get a majority to support a clean War Powers Act challenge. The  question is whether they can manage to do this without opponents  sticking unrelated language about Israel, or anything else, into the  text that will ultimately derail it. 
Senators to Reintroduce Bill to End US Involvement in Yemen War Next Week
Leadership derailed Senate vote on House bill, forcing them to start from scratch 
			Jason Ditz is Senior Editor for Antiwar.com. He has 20 years of experience in foreign policy research and his work has appeared in The American Conservative, Responsible Statecraft, Forbes, Toronto Star, Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Providence Journal, Washington Times, and the Detroit Free Press.
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