NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS678
ENT12
SUN · 2026-06-28 · 15:02 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0628-88131
News/Bill Cassidy accuses Trump of treating Congress as ‘merely a…
NSR-2026-0628-88131News Report·EN·Political Strategy

Bill Cassidy accuses Trump of treating Congress as ‘merely an appendage’

Senator Bill Cassidy, who is being ousted from his position, accused President Trump of treating Congress as "merely an appendage" in his handling of the Iran war. Cassidy stated this during a CBS News interview, explaining a recent confrontation with Trump over the administration's failure to brief Congress on the hostilities.

Ed PilkingtonThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-06-28 · 15:02 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
THE GUARDIAN - WORLD NEWS
Reading time
3min
Word count
678words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Senator Bill Cassidy, who is being ousted from his position, accused President Trump of treating Congress as "merely an appendage" in his handling of the Iran war. Cassidy stated this during a CBS News interview, explaining a recent confrontation with Trump over the administration's failure to brief Congress on the hostilities. Cassidy argued that the Constitution requires such briefings to prevent an overly powerful presidency. Following a heated exchange where Cassidy raised his voice to match Trump's, the President eventually agreed to a briefing. Cassidy, who previously voted to convict Trump in impeachment proceedings, also criticized Trump's domestic priorities and questioned the administration's objectives in the Iran conflict.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Conflict
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Julia Letlow, the challenger Trump backed, won a runoff election and is positioned to replace Cassidy in the Senate.

factual
Confidence
1.00
02

Cassidy questioned Trump's domestic priority of passing the Save America Act, suggesting focus should be on affordability.

quoteBill Cassidy
Confidence
1.00
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Cassidy stated that the US Constitution's separation of powers requires Congress to be briefed on military hostilities.

factualBill Cassidy
Confidence
1.00
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Senator Bill Cassidy accused President Trump of treating Congress as 'merely an appendage' in his handling of the Iran war.

quoteBill Cassidy
Confidence
1.00
05

Following a confrontation, Trump conceded and granted Cassidy a briefing on the war from Vice-President JD Vance and Steve Witkoff.

factualBill Cassidy
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 678 words
Bill Cassidy, the Republican senator from Louisiana who is being ousted from his position after Donald Trump successfully backed a challenger in May’s primary, has accused the US president of treating Congress as “merely an appendage” in his handling of the Iran war.In an interview on Sunday with CBS News’s Face the Nation, the out-going Cassidy explained his recent face-to-face row with Trump over the president’s failure to brief Congress on the prosecution of the hostilities with Tehran. In a fleetingly rare instance of a Republican politician directly standing up to Trump, Cassidy let rip at a Capitol Hill lunch over the senator’s support for a war powers resolution that was a symbolic rebuke to the White House.After Trump “berated” Cassidy and three other Republican senators who had voted for the resolution, Cassidy let his “Irish temper” get the best of him, he told the political talk show. “I raised my volume to match his,” he said, echoing remarks he had recently made.The cause of his anger, Cassidy said, was that under the separation of powers laid out in the US Constitution, Congress had to be briefed. The US’s founding fathers had designed the arrangement “so that there would not be too powerful of an institution of a presidency” and so that it would “reflect all of the American people, not just the will of one person”.Set against that founding vision, Cassidy accused Trump of acting “as if Congress is merely an appendage, and frankly, sometimes Congress acts like it’s an appendage”.The senator added that he had “accomplished the mission” in that following the blazing row Trump conceded and granted him a briefing on the war from Vice-President JD Vance and special envoy Steve Witkoff. Having received that audience, Cassidy dropped his support for the war powers resolution.Nonetheless, Cassidy’s plain spoken comments to Face the Nation indicate that the senator remains emboldened having effectively been chucked out of the Senate seat he has occupied since 2015. On Saturday, Julia Letlow, the challenger Trump backed in May’s Republican primary, won a runoff election and is now in pole position to replace Cassidy in November’s general election.Cassidy, who demonstrated his independent streak when he voted to convict Trump on impeachment charges over his supporters’ US Capitol attack on 6 January 2021, had strong words over how the president’s second term was going. He questioned Trump’s domestic priority of passing the Save America Act that would introduce new federal voting restrictions, saying that he should be focused instead on “how we make life more affordable for the average American”.He said: “If I were president, I’d be focused on what a family around the kitchen table is looking at as they go through their bills. … How do you make their life better?”On the Iran war, Cassidy was critical of what he suggested was the Trump administration’s failure to meet its initial objectives. “The fact is that a medium-sized power at this point is perceived to have fought a superpower to a draw,” he said, adding that the conflict had so far cost $29bn and claimed 13 American lives.A more upbeat assessment was given on NBC’s Meet the Press by Cassidy’s fellow Republican senator Roger Marshall. “I don’t think the war is over [but] we’re making great progress,” Marshall, of Kansas, said. “So I’m asking America to hang in there.”In his interview, Cassidy also made threatening noises over the confirmation process for the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, in which the senator is likely to wield a key vote. He has been among a group of Republican senators who have vented fury at justice department attempts to set up a $1.8bn so-called “weaponization fund” to pay Trump’s allies – as well as a move to permanently shield the president and his family from IRS audits.“I absolutely object to that,” Cassidy told CBS News. “Leaders should be held to a higher standard, not a different standard. They should be more accountable … I would object to anything that goes against the spirit of that, and making one person above the law is wrong.”
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Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
congress
1.00
donald trump
1.00
bill cassidy
1.00
separation of powers
1.00
iran war
0.80
war powers resolution
0.70
us constitution
0.60
presidency
0.50
impeachment
0.40
§ 07

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