
On Wednesday, June 3, 2026, President Donald Trump abruptly called reporters into the Oval Office for a brief, unscheduled Q&A on the months‑long war with Iran. He portrayed negotiations as edging toward a deal and insisted progress was being made, even as lawmakers on Capitol Hill moved to rein in his authority over the conflict.
Short Oval Office Session
A video posted by CBS News Detroit shows Trump fielding questions on ceasefire talks and the broader status of negotiations, according to CBS News. The tightly controlled drop‑in session came off as a White House effort to seize the narrative while diplomats and military commanders handled the details out of view.
Podcast Claim About Nukes
Earlier the same day, Trump told a podcast he believed Tehran had already agreed not to pursue a nuclear weapon and floated the idea of meeting Iran's supreme leader if current talks "work out," according to The Guardian. "They've already agreed they're not going to have a nuclear weapon," he said, a declaration that drew swift skepticism from foreign‑policy experts.
Congress Pushes Back
On Capitol Hill, the House voted 215‑208 on Wednesday to approve a war powers measure aimed at forcing the administration to end hostilities in Iran unless Congress explicitly authorizes force, a tally that included four Republicans, as reported by The Washington Post. The resolution is largely symbolic and likely headed for a veto, but the vote underscores a growing bipartisan impatience with a war now entering its fourth month.
Political Fallout
The pushback split Republicans, with some members arguing Trump needs room to negotiate while others cast the measure as a basic constitutional check on executive power, according to The Guardian. Operatives in both parties say the vote raises the political cost of prolonged strikes and sets the stage for fierce scrutiny of any agreement the White House eventually rolls out.
What To Watch
Senators are expected to weigh related measures as negotiators race to lock down possible terms, while markets and key shipping routes stay on edge amid the uncertainty. Hoodline has tracked the administration's shifting rhetoric on the conflict, including earlier coverage of Trump's vow not to use nuclear arms, highlighted in his vow to swear off nukes.









