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Cory Booker’s Challenge

April 4, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Sen. Cory Booker during his filibuster. (C-Span)
Sen. Cory Booker during his filibuster. (C-Span)

By Bruce Wolpe

The Democrats have been under intense pressure to find an effective way to challenge US President Donald Trump without control of either chamber of Congress or a de facto opposition leader.

They may have just found one. New Jersey Senator Cory Booker took the Senate floor on Monday evening in Washington to give a speech lambasting Trump’s actions. He didn’t stop talking – aside for the occasional question from a fellow Democrat – until Tuesday night, 25 hours later.




So, how common are these types of speeches in the US Congress, and what’s the point?

Cory Booker reportedly did not leave the chamber to use the toilet and sipped from two glasses of water.

Filibusters throughout history

Booker’s speech set a new record for the longest continuous speech in the Senate, surpassing Senator Strom Thurmond’s 24-hour speech in 1957 to try to prevent the passage of the Civil Rights Act.

This was during the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the supreme commander of the Allied forces in Europe during the second world war. The army was the great desegregation force in the 1940s, and Eisenhower, as president in the 1950s, was strongly in favour of civil rights.

Strom Thurmond.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division/Wikimedia Commons

In 1957, Congress was going to pass a civil rights bill that would make it harder for officials in southern states, in particular, to prevent Black people from voting. So Thurmond, the South Carolina senator and fierce proponent of segregation, launched what was (until today) the longest speech in Senate history to oppose it.

Thurmond’s speech was a filibuster, an extended speech in the Senate to attempt to delay or block a vote on a bill or confirmation. Thurmond, however, was unable to stop enactment of the bill.




Senators engage in filibusters when they know they’re going to lose, especially when it’s a piece of legislation they really dislike or disagree with. Because they can’t stop the passage of the bill, they use the filibuster to call attention to their opposition to it. The intention is to rally the troops and say, “I’m standing with you, even if this vote goes the other way”.

In 2016, Democratic Senator Chris Murphy, who represents the state of Connecticut where the deadly shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School took place, launched a nearly 15-hour filibuster to force the Republican Senate leadership to allow votes on two gun control measures.

Republican Senator Ted Cruz also spoke all night – 21 hours in total – against Obamacare in 2013. It wasn’t all focused on health policy; he filled the time by reading the children’s book, Green Eggs and Ham by Dr Seuss.

Highlights from Ted Cruz’s filibuster.

What Booker was trying to achieve

Booker’s speech was not technically a filibuster – he wasn’t holding the floor to talk against a specific bill, as Thurmond was. He was giving time to his Democratic colleagues to just control the shape of the general debate about Trump.

Senators use speeches like this when they’re losing on a issue, and Booker feels the Democrats are currently losing to Trump. They have been unable to stop any of his executive actions, so they feel they need to cut through in some way to reach the American people.




Trump has been “flooding the zone” from the moment he took office in January with hundreds of policies and executive actions – and he has been extremely successful at it. These actions cut across so many areas, it’s been very hard for the Democrats, on any given day, to pick out the top things to fight against.

Because they don’t have control of the House or Senate, and there is no opposition leader, there is no single, principal Democrat who can stand up day by day and say, “This is what happened, this was what the threat to the country is, this why we’re opposing it and this is the way we’re going to attack it”.

Trump is controlling the narrative and the media environment. And the Democratic leadership has been unable to counter it, even though, at the grassroots level, Democrats and many others who voted for Trump are really angry.

As Booker put it during his speech:

Moments like this require us to be more creative or more imaginative, or just more persistent and dogged and determined.

There comes a certain point in a human drama that transcends partisanship when you’re looking at someone speaking from the heart, speaking their convictions and you can come to respect them.

Booker ran for the presidency in 2020 and ultimately yielded to Joe Biden, and I expect we’ll hear much more from him in 2028 when the next presidential election occurs. He is most likely going to run again.

Bruce Wolpe is a Non-resident Senior Fellow at the United States Study Centre at the University of Sydney.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pogo says

    April 5, 2025 at 8:09 am

    @God bless Senator Booker

    … another man better than what this country deserves; and exactly what it desperately needs.

    20
  2. Laurel says

    April 5, 2025 at 11:30 am

    Good for Booker! Storm Thurmond filibustered the Civil Rights Act. Thank goodness it didn’t work. D’Amato, of New York, read from the D.C. phone book to stall legislation. Cory Booker spent his time talking about the issues of today, and how Trump is handling it (His speech was not a filibuster). I think he is a straight up, upbeat guy. Somebody earlier commented on how nobody would remember Booker’s speech. Well:

    “Over 300,000 people watched Cory Booker’s speech live across his platforms, and it received more than 350 million likes on TikTok.”
    – AI generated by NBC News and Yahoo

    Trump is listening to Laura Loomer, of all people. A self described white supremacist, and conspiracy theorist (she reiterated Haitians eating pets, among other stupid stuff), is telling the President of the United States to fire people supposedly not loyal to him. Being loyal to the country doesn’t matter, it’s about being loyal to Trump, in her, and his, minds. Trump fired a four star general on the lunatic’s advice. This is where we are now.

    12
  3. jake says

    April 5, 2025 at 5:42 pm

    Blah, blah, blan, nothing said of value, nothing to gain.

    6
  4. Pierre Tristam says

    April 5, 2025 at 9:06 pm

    Jake, no need to analyze your own comments for us. We get it.

    10
  5. sue says

    April 6, 2025 at 10:45 am

    He rambled on like a babbling idiot. The world is catching on to the lies and deception of the Dems that’s why Soro’s has to pay to organize rallies to protest. TRUE PATRIOTS DIDN’T NEED TO BE PAID TO ATTEND TRUMP RALLIES. TDS- can be cured come to the other side Biden will buy you a ice cream cone. LOL

    5
  6. Sherry says

    April 6, 2025 at 11:22 am

    OH! OH! Jake looked in the mirror again. . .

    3
  7. Sherry says

    April 6, 2025 at 11:23 am

    CORY BOOKER. . . MY HERO!

    6
  8. Sherry says

    April 6, 2025 at 7:17 pm

    Well sue, maybe it took Cory Booker standing and talking for over 25 hours to sound “rambling like a babbling idiot” to you. But, you managed it in only 4 hate filled sentences, congratulations!

    3
  9. joe says

    April 6, 2025 at 7:48 pm

    “… that’s why Soro’s has to pay to organize rallies to protest.” Sue, you really need to get out more….being in the Trump_ FOX bubble has truly rotted your brain.

    Please provide ONE SHRED of evidence that George Soros has paid ONE citizen to go out and protest. This blaming of Soros for almost anything you cultists dislike has been going on for years. Our country is being destroyed by a very damaged, cruel, and evil man – the citizens whooping showed up to demonstrate see reality far, far better than you and the rest of the cult members ever will.

    3
  10. Laurel says

    April 7, 2025 at 9:29 am

    Sherry: Jake looked in the mirror, and saw Sue.

    That poor woman is so full of misinformation! Clearly, she has her TV tuned to confirmation bias stations. Ill betcha $10 she never watched sixty seconds of Booker’s speech.

    2
  11. Sherry Epley says

    April 8, 2025 at 8:01 pm

    LOL! LOL! LOL! You are absolutely wonderful Laurel! Loving your comment about jake looking in the mirror and seeing sue. My laugh of the day!

    I’ll take that bet and raise you $100. . . she said with a poker face. Poor sue!

    2

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