0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

Rep. Jim Himes Joins Bobby Jones on his War Powers Resolution & the Fate of ACA Credits

The Democratic congressman is one of the few who's watched classified footage of the deadly Sept. 2 boat strike in the Caribbean. He says it's ‘one of the most troubling things’ he’s ever seen.

On Wednesday, the Republican-controlled House rejected Democrats’ War Powers Resolution to end the Trump administration’s military strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific.

Congressman Jim Himes (D-Conn.) issued a statement along with co-sponsors Reps. Gregory W. Meeks (D-N.Y.), Adam Smith (D-Wash.), Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.), Jason Crow (D-Colo.), and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.):

“The Trump administration’s ongoing lethal U.S. military strikes on alleged drug boats in the Western Hemisphere are legally questionable, and ineffective. Under existing U.S. law, these vessels could have been interdicted and their occupants subjected to judicial process. Instead of pursuing prosecutions, this administration has deliberately avoided judicial scrutiny by conducting lethal strikes, repatriating survivors, and in at least one instance, carrying out a second strike on defenseless persons.”

Today on Lincoln Square, Anchor Watch host Bobby Jones pressed Himes on what it actually means when Congress is cut out of life-and-death decisions that traditionally required debate, authorization, and accountability. Himes, the Ranking Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, lays out how intelligence oversight exists precisely because secrecy and democracy are in permanent tension, and how that balance breaks when lethal force becomes routine rather than exceptional.

The discussion connects foreign policy choices directly to domestic consequences, arguing that governance failures abroad and affordability failures at home come from the same disregard for process and transparency. There’s a moral warning embedded here: when policy shortcuts push impossible decisions down to commanders, doctors, or families, leaders avoid responsibility while others absorb the risk. This is not about ideology, but about accountability—what happens when power moves faster than law, and when silence replaces democratic consent.

Share

Tune in for the full discussion between Rep. Jim Himes and Bobby Jones and become a Lincoln Square Subscriber today!


Live Interviews

'A Scary Moment for Democracy' | Congressman Jim Himes Joins Susan J. Demas

'A Scary Moment for Democracy' | Congressman Jim Himes Joins Susan J. Demas

Rep. Jim Himes has spent over a decade serving Connecticut’s 4th Congressional District, bringing a thoughtful and steady voice to the chaos of Washington. Born abroad and educated at Harvard and Oxford, Himes understands the weight of America’s role on the world stage.

Discussion about this video

User's avatar

Ready for more?