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Home » White House tells lawmakers to hold their nerve on Iran, expect ‘long-term gain’
White House tells lawmakers to hold their nerve on Iran, expect ‘long-term gain’
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White House tells lawmakers to hold their nerve on Iran, expect ‘long-term gain’

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 11, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

WASHINGTON — The White House is privately pushing congressional lawmakers to keep their cool as the war in Iran wraps up its 12th day, arguing it is critical to root out threats from the Islamic Republic against the US and its allies.

The message from the White House to jittery Republicans is that the “short-term spike” at the pump is needed for a “long-term gain,” a White House official told The Post.

While Republicans in Congress are largely cheering on President Trump’s military campaign in Iran — at least publicly — many of them are anticipating fallout and potential midterm headaches from it. Some are even gently nudging him to wrap it up.

“This is an overriding success. Our military is astounding the world,” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) told Fox News’ “Jesse Watters Primetime” Tuesday. “It’s been astounding, historic.”

“Now it’s time to declare victory.”

Lawmakers had been given an estimate earlier this week that the first two days of Operation Epic Fury cost about $5.6 billion. But 12 days in, the total price tag thus far appears unknown to lawmakers.

“I think probably tens [of billions of dollars], but I don’t know,” House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) told The Post.

“Whether you agree or disagree with Iran, look, we are perilously low on some of the ammunition stocks that we would need if, God forbid, and nobody wants this, we got into a confrontation in the Western Pacific with the Chinese,” he added at another point during a wide-ranging interview.

“This is the time to do that to rebuild the industrial base inside the United States.

During their annual policy retreat in Doral, Florida, House GOP leadership strategized over how to wrangle through a supplemental package to fund the war effort in Iran, a GOP aide told The Post.

One option contemplated was tucking it into a follow-up reconciliation package to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the source explained.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) has kept his powder dry on how Democrats will respond to a formal request for additional military spending. Though he has backed a war powers resolution to stop the fighting.

Perhaps the biggest pain point worrying lawmakers is the impact of the war on oil prices. Iran has launched attacks in the Strait of Hormuz, where about a fifth of the world’s seaborne oil flows through annually.

The effort is seemingly intended to make the war as painful as possible for the US and the world.

“The greatest danger for the Trump administration right now is if they close down the Strait of Hormuz [and] we can’t keep that open,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) told The Post. “That’s not going to be good for oil prices, gasoline prices, affordability.”

“I don’t know what sleeper cells are in here [if] they activate those,” he added. “This was not an easy decision for Trump to make. This was a risky decision for Trump to make. But he had to do it.”

Nationally, gasoline prices are nearing $3.6 per gallon, according to data from the American Automobile Association. They were below $3 a gallon before the war broke out.

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Oil prices also blew past $100 a barrel briefly on Monday, but have since dropped back down to around $85.

Trump has contended that gasoline “prices are coming down very substantially.”

“I figured we’d be hit a little bit. We were hit less than I thought and we’ll be back on track in a pretty short while,” he told reporters Wednesday.

The International Energy Agency announced on Wednesday that its members are planning to release 400 million barrels of oil to stabilize markets amid the chaos at the Strait of Hormuz.

But some GOP pols are worried that a protracted conflict in Iran could deal enough of a blow to oil prices to upset voters.

“We are behind the eight ball as far as the electoral process,” Paul, a longtime critic of US interventionism, bluntly assessed to Fox Business Network’s “Mornings with Maria” on Tuesday.

“If you add in high gas prices, high oil prices, and if we are still bombing Iran with kinetic action — people don’t want to call it war — if there’s still kinetic action that causes oil to be over $100, I think you’re going to see a disastrous election,” Paul predicted.

The War Powers Act of 1973 restricts the president from ordering troop engagement abroad for more than 60 days without congressional approval. That law also allows for a 30-day extension.

Trump has been coy about the precise timeline for when the war in Iran will end, after initially suggesting it may carry on for four weeks, before later claiming that the US is ahead of schedule.

“Any time I want it to end, it will end,” he told Axios.

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