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April 5, 2025 23:45-00:09 - CSPAN
23:58
U.S. Senate Sen. Booker Pt. 1
Participants
Main
c
cory booker
sen/d 18:43
Appearances
h
hakeem jeffries
rep/d 01:03
Clips
l
lee hawkins
00:14
|

Speaker Time Text
unidentified
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New Jersey Democratic Senator Corey Booker broke the record for making the longest Senate speech in history with remarks that lasted more than 25 hours.
The previous record was set by South Carolina's Strom Thurmond, who spoke for more than 24 hours on opposing the Civil Rights Act.
We'll show portions of Senator Booker's remarks, which focused on Trump administration policies and their effects on American citizens.
Here's how the 25-hour speech got underway.
cory booker
I want to say at the top that I have a tremendous love for this institution.
hakeem jeffries
And a lot of that's born from the people that are here, from the pages I get to know in every class to the folks who work the doors, the clerks, the parliamentarians.
cory booker
This is a special place, and a lot of the people who are known here are not the ones that really keep this place functioning.
I come in here days and have good moods or bad moods, but always find myself lifted when I walk onto this floor.
It's a sacred civic space.
It is extraordinary.
hakeem jeffries
And I'm always aware of the weight of history when I walk in here, no matter a good day, bad day, whether I'm in a rush or not.
cory booker
When I touch the Senate floor, I feel something really magnificent.
I don't think that our founders would have ever imagined a body like this with black people on both sides of the aisle, with women serving here, with folks from many different backgrounds.
We are, in many ways, doing what this Senate, what the founders had envisioned, which was this idea of every generation making this a more perfect union.
But there have been times in this journey where our union was in crisis and was in peril.
There have been times in this great American journey over our 250 years where so many heroes had to emerge, people that I've come to revere, like Joshua Chamberlain from Maine, who played such a pivotal role in the Battle of Gettysburg.
What a noble soul he was.
He would later go on to be the governor of his state and go on to great things, but his heroism lay that in a time of crisis he stood up.
hakeem jeffries
I know there are veterans in this body and I admire them so much who have answered that call to serve our country and put their lives at sacrifice.
cory booker
There are people that I admire that are heroes of mine that were suffragette suffragists who were people who fought as abolitionists.
There are people more recently that I've come to lionize and admire because they did so much for this country, not with titles, not with high rank or positions, but folks who, when this country was facing crossroads, was facing crises.
They stood up.
They spoke up.
One of my greatest heroes of life was a man I got to serve with named John Lewis.
And I served with him in this body.
And every top opportunity I had, I would ask him about the times when he was just a 20-something.
He was the youngest person who was a featured speaker on the March on Washington.
He was called the bravest man in the civil rights movement because he kept putting himself in harm's way to dramatize, to let folks know, to bring attention to the injustices in this world, and to say very strongly that this, what is going on in our country, is not normal, that this going on in our country is wrong.
I stand on this floor as a United States Senator, but I revere people who never stood on this floor, people who, before they even got to their 30s and 40s and 50s in life, were out there as great patriots fighting for this nation.
I rise today in an unusual manner, and I want to be clear and explain that, but I just want to tell you what John Lewis said that's a quote so many people know.
And he really spoke not to members of the Senate or the Congress.
He was really speaking to Americans.
He said, get in good trouble, necessary trouble.
Help redeem the soul of America.
John Lewis died in 2020, July, at a time that it was Trump, Donald Trump's first term in office.
And he did what Congress people did, but he also did some really extraordinary things to fight for health care.
My friend Chris Murphy knows about that.
He was there when John Lewis did an open Facebook chat, not in this chamber or in the House chamber.
He sat on the steps and people were there.
I remember when he did a sit-in.
They had to shut the cameras off on him.
He got in good trouble on the House side, too.
And so I start tonight thinking about him.
hakeem jeffries
I've been thinking about him a lot during these last 71 days, get in good trouble, necessary trouble, help redeem the soul of America, and had to ask myself, if he's my hero, how am I living up to his words?
cory booker
I think Democrats and Republicans have made a lot of mistakes.
hakeem jeffries
No side has a monopoly on the truth.
cory booker
No side has been perfect servants of this country.
But what's happened in the last 71 days is a patent demonstration of a time where John Lewis's call to everyone has, I think, become more urgent and more pressing.
And if I think it's a call for our country, I have to ask myself how I'm living these words.
So tonight, I rise with the intention of getting in some good trouble.
I rise with the intention of disrupting the normal business of the United States Senate For as long as I am physically able, I rise tonight because I believe sincerely that our country is in crisis.
And I believe that, not in a partisan sense, because so many of the people that have been reaching out to my office in pain, in fear, having their lives upended, so many of them identify themselves as Republicans.
Indeed, conversations from in this body to in this building to across my state and recently in a travel across the country, Republicans as well as Democrats are talking to me about what they feel as a sense of dread about a growing crisis or what they point to about what is going wrong, that bedrock commitments in our country that both sides rely on, that people from all backgrounds rely on, those bedrock commitments are being broken.
Unnecessary hardships are being borne by Americans of all backgrounds.
And institutions which are special in America, which are precious, which are unique in our country, are being recklessly, and I would say even unconstitutionally affected, attacked, and even shattered.
In just 71 days, the President of the United States has inflicted so much harm on Americans' safety, financial stability, the core foundations of our democracy, and even our aspirations as a people from our highest offices a sense of common decency.
These are not normal times in America.
And they should not be treated as such.
John Lewis, so many heroes before us would say that this is the time to stand up, to speak up.
This is the time to get in some good trouble, to get into necessary trouble.
I can't allow this body to continue without doing something different, speaking out.
hakeem jeffries
The threats to American people and American democracy are grave and urgent, and we all must do more.
cory booker
We all must do more against them.
But those 10 words, if it is to be, it is up to me.
hakeem jeffries
All of us have to think of those 10 words, 10 two-letter words.
cory booker
If it is to be, if it is up to me, because I believe generations from now will look back at this moment and have a single question.
Where were you?
Where were you when our country was in crisis and when American people were asking for help?
Help me.
Help me.
Did we speak up?
When 73 million American seniors who rely on Social Security were to have that promise mocked, attacked, and then to have the services undermined, to be told that there will be no one there to answer if you call for help.
When our seniors became afraid and worried and panicked because of the menacing words of their president, of the most wealthy person in the world of cabinet secretaries, did we speak up?
When the American economy in 71 days, 71 days has been upended, when prices at the grocery store were skyrocketing and the stock market was plunging, when pension funds, 401ks, were going down, when Americans were hurting and looking up, where the resounding answer to this question was no.
Are you better off economically than you were 71 days ago?
Where were you?
Did you speak up at a time when the President of the United States was launching trade wars against our most close allies?
When he was firing regulators who investigate America's biggest banks and biggest corporations and stop them from taking advantage of the little guy or the little gal or my grandmother or your grandfather, dismantling the agency that protects consumers from fraud, the only one whose sole purpose is to look out for them.
Did you speak up when the President of the United States, in a way that is so crass and craven, peddled his own meme coin and made millions upon millions upon millions of dollars for his own bank account at a time so many are struggling economically?
Did you speak up when the President of the United States did what amounts to a car commercial for the richest man in the world right in front of America's house, the White House, when the President tried to take health care away?
Where were you?
Did you speak up?
Threatening a program called Medicaid helps people with disabilities, helps expectant mothers, helps millions upon millions of Americans.
And why?
Why?
As part of a larger plan to pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest amongst us who've done the best over the last 20 years, for billionaires that seemed so close to the President that they sat right on the dais at his inauguration and sit in his cabinet meetings at the White House.
Did you speak up when he gutted public education, slashed funds for pediatric cancer research, fired thousands of veterans who risked their lives for their country, when he abandoned our allies and our international commitments at a time when floods,
fires, and hurricanes and droughts are devastating communities across this country, when countries all around the world are banding together to do something and he turned his back?
Did you speak up when outbreaks of dangerous infectious diseases are still a global threat, but yet we have stopped engaging in the efforts necessary to meet those threats?
Where were you when the American press was being censored?
When international students were being disappeared from American streets without due process, when American universities were being intimidated into silence, challenging that fundamental idea of freedom of thought, freedom of expression, when the law firms that represent clients that may not be favored were attacked and attacked and attacked, where were you?
Did you speak up when they came for those firms?
Or what about when the people who attacked the police officers who defended this building and American democracy on January 6th, who just outside those doors put their lives on the line for us, and many of them would later die?
Where were you when the president pardoned them, celebrated them, and even talked of giving them money?
The people who savagely beat American police officers.
Did you speak up when Americans from across the country were all speaking up?
More and more voices in this country speaking up, saying, This is not right, this is un-American, this is not who we are, this is not America.
Did you speak up?
And so I rise tonight because I believe to be about what is normal right now when so much abnormal is happening is unacceptable.
I rise tonight because silence at this moment of national crisis would be a betrayal of some of the greatest heroes of our nation.
Because at stake in this moment is nothing less than everything that we brag about, that we talk about, that makes us special.
At stake right now are some of our most basic American principles that so many Americans understand are worth fighting for, worth standing for, worth speaking up for.
Like if you work hard your entire life and pay into Social Security, it should be there for you when you retire and you should not have to question if those paychecks will arrive.
And the government should strive to improve service to you, not brag about cutting it.
Basic American principles like if you serve your nation in the military, if you put your life in danger abroad, you will be respected and taken care of.
You will be cherished and honored and not forced to worry that the federal employees who provide you with care, many of whom who are veterans themselves, will be fired or the benefits that you rely on will be denied or that your health care needs won't be met.
Basic American principles like your child will have access to a high-quality public education, that every child has a unique genius.
Even our children, beautiful children with special needs, they have genius.
And then our children can go to school and parents and teachers know that they will be safe there.
At stake now are those basic American principles that the people you elect to serve you in government will represent you and not try to make themselves richer, not run some scam and call you a sucker.
These basic ideals of our nation, that everyone's rights will be equally protected and everyone will be held accountable under the law.
Right now, all of this things that make our country different are under attack.
Our constituents are asking us to acknowledge this.
Everywhere I travel now, I hear from Republicans and Independents and Democrats who are afraid, who are worried, who are angry.
And I think about John Lewis, who taught me that fear is not something to be shunned.
It's almost a signpost that you're headed in the right direction.
It is something that is a necessary precondition.
You cannot have great fear without great courage.
John Lewis would tell us that this is a time for great courage.
He would tell us that anger is a fuel.
It can consume you, debilitate you, or it could fuel you to put yourself in service of others.
I feel if my friend was here, if my hero was here, he would tell us and try to teach us that this is a moment to know that despair is only possible if you don't meet it as an agent of hope.
If John Lewis was here, he would look at me and say, What are you doing?
What are we doing?
So tonight I rise in an unusual way.
I rise with the intention to stand here until I can stand no longer, until I'm physically unable to stand anymore.
I'm going to speak up.
hakeem jeffries
I'm going to try to cause some good trouble in this body I respect so much.
I'm going to try to cause what I believe is necessary trouble.
cory booker
I'm going to try to honor the legacy that I know I've inherited as an American.
The legacy I think about when I come to this floor and feel sometimes overwhelmed with all the sacrifice and struggle that had to get me here.
Good people who caused good trouble in the face of slavery, good people who caused good trouble in the face of the denial of the right to vote, good people who caused good trouble in the cause of equal rights,
good people who caused good trouble in the fight against hate, good people who caused good trouble in the fight against demagogues from McCarthy to Father Conklin to big people who showed such small character when they tried to suppress others.
I want to cause good trouble and prove worthy of those who came before.
This is not normal.
Listen to America.
Listen to Americans.
They seem to always be ahead of this body.
They're rising up in state after state, not along partisan lines, but as an American line.
unidentified
Nearly 24 hours later, Senator Booker was close to breaking the record.
In this portion, he surpasses the length of Senator Thurman's milestone speech and is acknowledged by his peers and guests in the gallery.
After nearly 25 hours spent talking on the Senate floor without a bathroom break or being allowed to sit, Senator Booker finished his record-breaking speech and thanked staff for... C-SPAN's Washington Journal.
our live forum inviting you to discuss the latest issues in government, politics, and public policy from Washington and across the country.
Coming up Sunday morning, Henry Olson of the Ethics and Public Policy Center talks about President Trump's agenda and other political news of the day.
Then the Center for Election Innovation and Research founder David Becker will talk about President Trump's executive order requiring proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote in federal elections.
C-SPAN's Washington Journal.
Join in the conversation live at 7 Eastern Sunday morning on C-SPAN, C-SPAN now or online at c-span.org.
Sunday night on C-SPAN's Q&A.
Journalist and musician Lee Hawkins, author of I Am Nobody's Slave, talks about the impact that slavery and Jim Crow have had on his family through multiple generations.
Mr. Hawkins examines the relationship between the past violence experienced by family members, often at the hands of white people, and the way his parents raised and severely disciplined him.
lee hawkins
All I knew growing up was that if I asked too many questions, if I said no to my parents, if I question any aspect of upbringing, and if I fell fell short of excellence,
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