Such an outcome which looked all but inconceivable in the days after the deal was signed July 14, and remains a long-shot would be a major victory for Obama, who is staking his foreign policy legacy largely on the agreement struck by the US, Iran and five world powers to dismantle most of Iran's nuclear program in exchange for billions in sanctions relief.
As of now 28 Democratic senators publicly support the deal, with just two opposed. But supporters feel so confident that they can get to 34 that some have begun to say in private that 41 may even be in reach.
Many caution that remains a remote possibility, with Republicans unanimously opposed and Israeli officials arguing vehemently against a deal they say could empower enemies sworn to their destruction. And yet predictions that Republican opponents and the powerful-pro-Israel lobby would use Congress' August recess to make the deal politically toxic have not come to pass.
"We feel good about the fact that after two-thirds of the Democratic caucus has committed that we have substantial support for the president with only two dissenters,"
Democratic Sen Dick Durbin, who's leading the whip operation in favor of the deal, said in an interview. "We continue to work it. I think the two that came out this week so far, Harry Reid and Debbie Stabenow, are very helpful," said Durbin, though he declined to predict success.
The disapproval resolution is certain to pass the House, though Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi has declared that Democrats have the votes to sustain an Obama veto. Two-thirds votes are required in each chamber to override a presidential veto.
Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of J Street, a liberal Jewish group supporting the deal, said his group is telling senators that since the deal clearly seems to command the support to prevail in the end, they should think twice about voting for a resolution of disapproval that would only end up getting vetoed.
