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HomeNewsCory Booker’s Senate Floor Speech Slamming Trump Hits 18 Hours and Counting

Cory Booker’s Senate Floor Speech Slamming Trump Hits 18 Hours and Counting

Senator Cory Booker gave a marathon all-night speech on the Senate floor that stretched into Tuesday afternoon, in an hourslong effort to put a spotlight on what he called a “crisis” facing the United States because of the Trump administration’s “recklessness.”

Mr. Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, began speaking at 7 p.m. on Monday, and was still going at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, laying into the Trump administration’s cuts to government services and its crackdown on immigrants.

“This is not right or left, it is right or wrong,” Mr. Booker said on Tuesday afternoon, his voice still strong. “This is not a partisan moment, it is a moral moment. Where do you stand?”

The speech, which by afternoon had moved within reach of the Senate record for the longest such speech, was part of an effort by Democrats to retake the initiative and more assertively oppose President Trump. Mr. Booker divided his remarks into sections focused on an aspect of the administration’s policies, including on health care, education, immigration and national security.

He assailed what he said were Mr. Trump’s plans to cut funding for Medicaid, among other programs. The White House has denied that it plans to cut Medicaid benefits, but the president and his allies have attacked Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security over what they claim is waste, fraud and abuse.

“I rise with the intention of disrupting the normal business of the United States Senate for as long as I am physically able,” Mr. Booker said near the start of his speech on Monday. “I rise tonight because I believe sincerely that our nation is in crisis.”

As dawn broke, Mr. Booker, a former presidential candidate, declared he was “rip-roaring and ready” to continue.

“I’m wide-awake,” he said. “I’m going to stand here for as many hours as I can.”

Hovering over a lectern and often speaking in a booming voice, he paused several times to allow questions from fellow Democrats, including Senators Chuck Schumer of New York, Chris Murphy of Connecticut, and Raphael Warnock of Georgia, without formally relinquishing the floor. At points, Mr. Booker’s voice appeared to crack.

The speech was not a filibuster — a procedural tactic that has been used to block legislation on many issues, including civil rights — because it did not come during a debate over a specific bill or nominee.

Before his speech, Mr. Booker said on social media that he was heading to the Senate floor because Mr. Trump and Elon Musk, the billionaire who is one of the president’s top advisers, had shown what he called “a complete disregard for the rule of law, the Constitution and the needs of the American people.”

“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 for — from our highest offices — a sense of common decency,” Mr. Booker said in his speech. “These are not normal times in America, and they should not be treated as such.”

Mr. Musk’s feed on X, his social media platform, was active late into the night on Monday, but it made no mention of Mr. Booker or his all-night speech. Neither did Mr. Trump’s Truth Social feed.

As viewers followed along on Mr. Booker’s official YouTube channel, he quoted from celebrated speeches by Representative John Lewis and Senator John McCain, both of whom have died. At one point, he spent around 30 minutes reading an account by a Canadian citizen, Jasmine Mooney, about her detention in the United States by immigration enforcement officers.

As the speech neared 20 hours, to moved within reach of some of the longest in Senate history.

Since 1915, many of the 48 all-night sessions in the chamber — defined as those lasting past 4 a.m. — have gone well over 24 hours. Senator Ted Cruz’s verbal assault on President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act in 2013 lasted 21 hours and 19 minutes. In 1957, Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina spoke against a civil rights act for 24 hours 18 minutes.

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