An authorization by Congress was sought by President
George W. Bush soon after his September 12, 2002 statement before the U.N. General Assembly asking for quick action by the Security Council in enforcing the resolutions against Iraq. sponsored by
Sen. Daschle and
Sen. Lott was based on the original White House proposal authorizing the use of force in Iraq, sponsored by
Rep. Hastert and
Rep. Gephardt and the substantially similar sponsored by
Sen. Lieberman were modified proposals. sponsored by
Rep. Hastings was a separate proposal never considered on the floor. Eventually, the Hastert–Gephardt proposal became the legislation Congress focused on.
Passage of the full resolution Introduced in Congress on October 2, 2002, in conjunction with the administration's proposals, passed the
House of Representatives on Thursday afternoon at 3:05 p.m. EDT on October 10, 2002, by a vote of 296–133, and passed the
Senate after midnight early Friday morning, at 12:50 a.m. EDT on October 11, 2002, by a vote of 77–23. It was signed into law as by President Bush on October 16, 2002.
United States House of Representatives • 215 (96.4%) of 223 Republican representatives voted for the resolution. • 81 (39.2%) of 208 Democratic representatives voted for the resolution. • 6 (<2.7%) of 223 Republican representatives voted against the resolution: Reps.
Duncan (
R-
TN),
Hostettler (
R-
IN),
Houghton (
R-
NY),
Leach (
R-
IA),
Morella (
R-
MD),
Paul (
R-
TX). • 126 (~60.3%) of 209 Democratic representatives voted against the resolution. • The only Independent representative voted against the resolution: Rep.
Sanders (
I-
VT) • Reps.
Ortiz (
D-
TX),
Roukema (
R-
NJ), and
Stump (
R-
AZ) did not vote on the resolution.
United States Senate • 29 (58%) of 50 Democratic senators voted for the resolution. Those voting for the resolution were: Sens.
Baucus (
D-
MT),
Bayh (
D-
IN),
Biden (
D-
DE),
Breaux (
D-
LA),
Cantwell (
D-
WA),
Carnahan (
D-
MO),
Carper (
D-
DE),
Cleland (
D-
GA),
Clinton (
D-
NY),
Daschle (
D-
SD),
Dodd (
D-
CT),
Dorgan (
D-
ND),
Edwards (
D-
NC),
Feinstein (
D-
CA),
Harkin (
D-
IA),
Hollings (
D-
SC),
Johnson (
D-
SD),
Kerry (
D-
MA),
Kohl (
D-
WI),
Landrieu (
D-
LA),
Lieberman (
D-
CT),
Lincoln (
D-
AR),
Miller (
D-
GA),
Nelson (
D-
FL),
Nelson (
D-
NE),
Reid (
D-
NV),
Rockefeller (
D-
WV),
Schumer (
D-
NY), and
Torricelli (
D-
NJ). • 21 (42%) of 50 Democratic senators voted against the resolution. Those voting against the resolution were: Sens.
Akaka (
D-
HI),
Bingaman (
D-
NM),
Boxer (
D-
CA),
Byrd (
D-
WV),
Conrad (
D-
ND),
Corzine (
D-
NJ),
Dayton (
D-
MN),
Durbin (
D-
IL),
Feingold (
D-
WI),
Graham (
D-
FL),
Inouye (
D-
HI),
Kennedy (
D-
MA),
Leahy (
D-
VT),
Levin (
D-
MI),
Mikulski (
D-
MD),
Murray (
D-
WA),
Reed (
D-
RI),
Sarbanes (
D-
MD),
Stabenow (
D-
MI),
Wellstone (
D-
MN), and
Wyden (
D-
OR). • 1 (2%) of 49 Republican senators voted against the resolution: Sen.
Chafee (
R-
RI). • The only independent senator voted against the resolution: Sen.
Jeffords (
I-
VT)
Amendments offered to the House Resolution Lee Amendment : Amendment in the nature of a substitute sought to have the United States work through the United Nations to seek to resolve the matter of ensuring that Iraq is not developing weapons of mass destruction, through mechanisms such as the resumption of weapons inspections, negotiation, enquiry, mediation, regional arrangements, and other peaceful means. :: Sponsored by Rep.
Barbara Lee (D-CA). ::: Failed by the Ayes and Nays: 72 – 355
Spratt Amendment : Amendment in the nature of a substitute sought to authorize the use of U.S. armed forces to support any new
U.N. Security Council resolution that mandated the elimination, by force if necessary, of all Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, long-range ballistic missiles, and the means of producing such weapons and missiles. Requested that the president should seek authorization from Congress to use the armed forces of the U.S. in the absence of a U.N. Security Council resolution sufficient to eliminate, by force if necessary, all Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, long-range ballistic missiles, and the means of producing such weapons and missiles. Provided expedited consideration for authorization in the latter case. :: Sponsored by Rep.
John Spratt (D-SC-5). ::: Failed by the Yeas and Nays: 155 – 270
House Rules Amendment : An amendment considered as adopted pursuant to the provisions of :: Sponsored by House Rules. ::: Resolution (H.RES.574) agreed to by voice vote
Amendments offered to the Senate Resolution Byrd Amendments : To provide statutory construction that constitutional authorities remain unaffected and that no additional grant of authority is made to the president not directly related to the existing threat posed by Iraq. :: Sponsored by Sen.
Robert Byrd (D-WV). ::: Amendment SA 4868 not agreed to by Yea-Nay Vote: 14 – 86 : To provide a termination date for the authorization of the use of the Armed Forces of the United States, together with procedures for the extension of such date unless Congress disapproves the extension. :: Sponsored by Sen.
Robert Byrd (D-WV). ::: Amendment SA 4869 not agreed to by Yea-Nay Vote: 31 – 66
Levin Amendment : To authorize the use of the United States Armed Forces, pursuant to a new resolution of the United Nations Security Council, to destroy, remove, or render harmless Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, nuclear weapons-usable material, long-range ballistic missiles, and related facilities, and for other purposes. :: Sponsored by Sen.
Carl Levin (D-MI). ::: Amendment SA 4862 not agreed to by Yea-Nay Vote: 24 – 75
Durbin Amendment : To amend the authorization for the use of the Armed Forces to cover an imminent threat posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction rather than the continuing threat posed by Iraq. :: Sponsored by Sen.
Dick Durbin (D-IL). ::: Amendment SA 4865 not agreed to by Yea-Nay Vote: 30 – 70 ==Legal challenges==