The Hill
reports:
The House on Friday rejected a resolution that would authorize continued military operations in Libya for one year, and promptly began consideration of a bill that would limit funding for those operations.
The resolution, H.J.Res. 68, was rejected in a 123-295 vote that split Democrats much more than it split Republicans. Among Democrats, 115 voted for it and 70 voted against it.
The Republican vote was more one-sided: only 8 voted for it, and 225 voted against.
That's some not-insignificant opposition from Democrats. And, as Greg Sargent pointed out before the vote:
If enough Dems vote for it to create a sense that it has significant bipartisan support — which seems very possible — it will stand as an important statement of discomfort with Obama’s continued insistence that he doesn’t need Congressional authorization to continue the war.
I guess the president finally got that bipartisanship he's been wanting.