Congress

Legislator Watch: Representative Norma Torres Votes Against Curtailing U.S. Involvement in Israel’s War on Lebanon

On June 30, Representative Norma Torres (D) broke rank with her fellow Democrats to side with the vast majority of Republicans in voting against Representative Rashida Tlaib's Lebanon War Powers Resolution which, if passed, would have ordered the president to withdraw all U.S. service members from hostilities in Lebanon.

The measure failed by a vote of 189 to 235.

In what amounts to a sea-change of sentiment, the majority of Democrats (187) voted in favor of the resolution, joined by two Republicans, Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky. However, a small minority of Democrats, 22 in total, including Congresswoman Norma Torres, voted against it.

Just Foreign Policy, an anti-war group, lambasted the 22 Democrats who voted against the resolution.

“These 22 fringe House Democratic hawks revealed today that they don’t actually want the Iran War to end,” the group wrote in a post to social media. “By failing to end U.S. participation in the Israeli war in Lebanon, they are undermining a peace deal.”

Statements made by the resolution's author, Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib:

“The United States is not a bystander to these war crimes. It’s an active participant.”

And:

“The Trump administration is assisting the Israeli government as it bombs children in Lebanon. In just 25 days, nearly 1000 more people have died while Congress lacks the courage to end U.S. participation in this invasion. We must pass the Lebanon War Powers Resolution today [June 30].”

And:

“More than 1.3 million people have already been forced to leave their homes or be killed, with the Israeli military telling them they will not be allowed to return. Eighty-one Lebanese neighborhoods have been violently depopulated and demolished—erased from the map entirely.”

Congresswoman Norma Torres represents California's 35th Congressional District, which, after the passage of Proposition 50, includes the cities of Bloomington, Chino, Chino Hills, Claremont, Corona, Eastvale, Fontana, Montclair, Norco, Ontario, Pomona, Rancho Cucamonga, and Upland.

According to Track AIPAC, Congresswoman Norma Torres has received $427,988 in lifetime contributions from the pro-Israel lobbies.

Note from the editor:

As a Democrat, I often hear Democrats complain about our current Congress, asking why it is not doing more to curtail the current presidential administration's use of executive power, particularly in matters of war. Let this vote serve as part of the explanation. Even members of the president's opposition party are, at times, voting in ways that align with the administration's foreign policy and military objectives.

The 4 other Democratic Congress members from California who voted against the resolution are Representative Adam Gray (Central Valley); Rep. Jimmy Panetta (Central Coast); Representative Brad Sherman (North LA County and Ventura); and Representative Juan Vargas (Southern San Diego County).


Legislator Watch is an accountability series by The Pomonan that combines public records, legislative votes, campaign finance data, and editorial analysis to examine the actions of elected officials. While grounded in verifiable public information, the opinions and conclusions expressed are those of The Pomonan Editorial Board.

What’s in a Name? President Trump Chooses Punishing, Testosterone-Driven Names for his Ever-Expanding Military Objectives

"Maybe not a good thing to say WAR . . . I won’t use the word ‘war’ because they say if you use the word ‘war,’ that’s maybe not a good thing to do. They don’t like the word ‘war’ because you’re supposed to get approval. So, I’ll use the word ‘military operation,’ which is really what it is. It’s a military decimation.”

President Donald Trump, March 26, 2026 at the National Republican Congressional Committee’s (NRCC) annual fundraising dinner.

On March 17, 2026, with little fanfare and scant press coverage, the Assistant Secretary of War for Homeland Defense and America’s Security Affairs, Joseph M. Humire, launched our new military offensive in Ecuador, Operation Total Extermination. Calling it a series of “bilateral kinetic actions against cartel targets along the Colombia-Ecuador border,” he indicated it was an effort by Ecuador against transnational criminal organizations with the support of the U.S.A.

Of course, the big concern with this announcement is the escalating violence across the globe and how President Trump is finding it easy to circumvent Congress in this escalation. But that’s not what this article is about. This article is about President Trump choosing increasingly bellicose and combative names to promote his ever-expanding war efforts.

Reminder - this is only the beginning of year two of his four year term.

Since elected for the second time, President Trump has been choosing increasingly aggressive names to accompany his expanded use of military force and extension of a “strike first” doctrine. Prior to his announcement of Operation Total Extermination (with a name like that - what could possibly go wrong?), he has called his military aggressions, Operation Epic Fury, Operation Midnight Hammer, Operation Southern Spear, Operation Rough Rider and Operation Hawkeye Strike.

And Trump is waging his jingoistic name war domestically, as well. In the naming of his vicious attacks on immigrants, President Trump is riffing off of the same formula - with a twist. Showing off his virulent racism and his penchant for sick humor, he has named his operations to round up immigrants with cruel, taunting, schoolyard bully names like Operation Dirtbag, Operation Catch of the Day and Operation Charlotte’s Web - combining a bit of what he might call ‘whimsy’ with some very, very dark messaging.

All of these names for operations both international and domestic contrast the names that past presidents have coined to define their wars and military aggressions. A non-comprehensive review of names of past military actions includes: Operation Desert Storm in Iraq and Operation Just Cause in Panama (George H.W. Bush), Operation Allied Force in Yugoslavia (Clinton), Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan (George W. Bush), and Operation Odyssey Dawn in Libya (Obama). In naming the recent war in Iran and Lebanon, Operation Epic Fury President Trump borrowed terminology from former President Ronald Reagan and amped it up some. Former President Reagan called his war on Grenada Operation Urgent Fury.

Of course, there is an inherent problem in past U.S. Presidents glorifying (and at the same time downgrading) the horrors of war with such lofty names. For instance, former President Truman labeled the Korean War a “police action” in 1950. Even so, President Trump’s names are starting a new trend of announcing to the world the nation’s new emphasis on military thuggery.

It has always been problematic that Presidents have felt free to exercise their executive authority to deploy military force without a formal congressional declaration of war, but with Trump’s new military actions, we’ve entered a new age of very, very few checks and balances from our legislative branch of government. Based on data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED) covering the period from January 20, 2025, to early 2026, President Donald Trump's second term saw a rapid surge in military activity that surpassed the total number of airstrikes conducted during Joe Biden's entire four-year term from 2021-2025.

President Trump’s Second Term International Operations:

Operation Total Extermination (March 2026)
Operation Epic Fury (February 2026)  airstrikes against Iran
Operation Hawkeye Strike (December 2025) large-scale strikes against ISIS targets in Syria
Operation Southern Spear (September 2025) anti-narcotic/maritime campaign in the Caribbean
Operation Midnight Hammer (June 2025)  B-2 stealth bombers and missile strikes targeting Iranian nuclear infrastructure
Operation Rough Rider (March 2025) air and naval campaign against Houthi targets in Yemen, which included U.S.-led coalition

President Trump’s Second Term Domestic Operations Against Immigrants:

Operation Catch of the Day (January 2026)  Operations conducted in Maine
Operation Salvo (January 2026) An ICE raid in New York City targeting gang members.
Operation Catahoula Crunch (Swamp Sweep) (December 2025) Enforcement operations in Louisiana
Operation Metro Surge (December 2025) Immigration enforcement in the Minneapolis region
Operation Charlotte's Web (November 2025) a Department of Homeland Security action against undocumented immigrants in North Carolina
Operation Dirtbag (November 2025)  Enforcement operations in Florida

Operation Midway Blitz (January 2025) An operation in the Chicago metropolitan area where approximately 3,000 detained individuals reportedly disappeared from ICE records

In President Trump’s first presidency, his former Chief Strategist and Senior Counselor, Steve Bannon, in a 2019 PBS Frontline interview, outlined the strategy to overwhelm the media and opposition. by "flooding the zone" with rapid-fire initiatives, a concept he termed "muzzle velocity.” It’s a strategy President Trump has continued into his second term and it appears to be working.


Pamela Nagler Pamela Nagler is finishing her book, Unceded Land, Indigenous California and the Foreign Invasions: Spanish, Mexican, Russian, US.