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The Movie That Can Help You Understand Cory Booker's 25-Hour Senate Speech

The Movie That Can Help You Understand Cory Booker's 25-Hour Senate Speech

New York Times02-04-2025

Late in 'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,' Frank Capra's 1939 ode to democracy, free speech and the filibuster, a CBS newsman is trilling into his microphone near the Senate chamber. Inside that august room, he tells his listeners, is a man engaging in 'the American privilege of free speech in its most dramatic form.'
'The rrrrright,' he calls it, rolling that r, 'to talk your head off!'
He is referring to Jefferson Smith (played by a 30-ish Jimmy Stewart, all big eyes and gee-willikers wonder), the fish-out-of-water junior senator from some unnamed Western state and political party, who's held the Senate floor all night and is still at it. He's filibustering an appropriations bill to protest graft and injustice, specifically injustice against himself and more generally against the people of his state, his country and heck, why not, the whole world.
I thought of Smith and his idealism while watching Senator Cory Booker on Tuesday, 24 hours into his own record-setting speech to protest the actions of the Trump administration. (Technically it wasn't a filibuster because it did not come during a debate over a specific bill or nominee.) Stewart's performance is calibrated to heightened Hollywood standards, to be sure, but by the end of the movie's daylong filibuster, Smith looks as if he's got the flu: sweaty, haggard, staggering around, voice reduced to a painful rasp. By contrast Booker, who's about 25 years older than that character, remained coherent and composed and also audible, even when he concluded at the 25-hour mark. Cory Booker emerging from the Senate after his record-setting filibuster. Credit... Eric Lee/The New York Times
In truth, I always think of 'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington' (for rent on Apple TV+) when this kind of speech comes up. I saw it dozens of times as a teenager, as it was a favorite in the home-school community to which my family belonged. It's both very funny and profoundly idealistic, with its underlying belief that anybody who tries a feat this athletic and grueling — as the CBS newsman reminds the crowd, sitting down ends the filibuster — must be in the right. 'Either I'm dead right or I'm crazy!' Smith hollers at one point.
'You wouldn't care to put that to a vote, would you, senator?' one of his irritated colleagues replies. We know the movie's answer.
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