
Moment multiple Democrats fall asleep as Hakeem Jeffries drones on during 'marathon' anti-Trump speech
While Republicans worked to gather the votes necessary for final passage of the massive Trump-backed bill Wednesday night and into Thursday morning, Democrats, led by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, deployed delay tactics.
The New York Democrat took to the floor just before 5:00 am ET to begin an arduous, hours-long speech about the dangers presented by the GOP legislation.
'I feel the obligation Mr. Speaker to stand on this House floor and take my sweet time,' the Democrat leader proclaimed well into his remarks.
His speech began with stories of Americans who could be impacted by the Trump bill's cuts to Medicaid and social programs.
As of 9:45 am ET, the New Yorker was still droning on while several of his fellow Democrats could be seen behind him with eyes closed and heads folded down.
Despite his enthusiasm for hampering the GOP's plans, his colleagues seemed less excited. In fact, many appeared to be asleep.
'While Hakeem Jeffries continues putting people to sleep with his lies about the One Big Beautiful Bill, we remain focused on delivering historic tax cuts for families and small businesses, secure borders, and energy dominance,' Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks, R-Iowa, wrote on X.
White House Congressional Communications Director Charyssa Parent noted on X: 'Rep. Jeffries has put his own members to sleep.'
'Bedtime stories by Hakeem: The one time we voted against the largest tax cut for hardworking Americans in history.'
Rep. Sylvia Garcia, D-Texas, was seen with her head down and eyes closed as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries spoke in opposition to Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill.'
Several dozen Democrats rotated in and out of the chamber while the leader was speaking.
It appears that Jeffries may be taking a run at former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's record-setting speech in 2021 that lasted just over 8.5 hours.
While serving as House Minority Leader at the time, McCarthy lambasted former President Joe Biden's Build Back Better plan.
The former Republican spoke from 8:38 pm until 5:10 am in opposition to the Democrats' policy agenda.
Before McCarthy, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., held the record for the longest House speech. She delivered an 8-hour and 7-minute address about the importance of protecting the children of illegal immigrants, known as DREAMers.
Unlike the Senate, the House has no filibuster, but party leaders are afforded special speaking privileges that don't have a time limit, commonly referred to as the 'magic minute.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
28 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Texas's redistricting is a Republican power grab at the hands of Trump
When Texas Republicans redrew their congressional map this month at the urging of Donald Trump, they faced a difficult task. They needed to find a way to pick up five seats that the president wanted ahead of the midterm elections next year without spreading their voters too thin and jeopardizing the 25 seats they already held. Republicans unveiled their plan to pick up the seats on Wednesday, revealing a map that could dilute Hispanic voting power. Under the new proposed districts, they would be favored in five new seats, giving them a hold on 30 of Texas's 38 congressional districts. Had the district been in place for the 2024 election, Trump would have won all 30 by at least 10 points. Republicans accomplished their goal by shifting district boundaries in three different parts of the state. In south Texas, they shifted boundaries of congressional districts where Trump performed well in the 2024 elections, but are held by two Democrats, Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez. Trump won Cuellar's district by seven points and Gonzalez's districts by about four points in 2024. Had the proposed districts been in place in 2024, he would have won each by about 10 points. In central Texas, the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, and Houston, Republicans eliminated three separate Democratic congressional districts with a similar approach. They packed Democratic voters into one or two districts and then attached the rest to newly drawn, heavily Republican areas. It's an aggressive approach that gives Republicans a shot at picking up five seats, but doesn't necessarily guarantee they will get all five. Analysts believe that Cuellar – who faces federal bribery charges – and Gonzalez, are established enough incumbents that they could win in the new configurations of their districts. 'They didn't make the newly targeted, or the new seats targeted for pickups, as red as they could have,' said David Wasserman, a well-respected analyst at the Cook Political Report. 'Had Republicans drawn an uglier map, they could have basically guaranteed themselves five [seats].' Here are the results of the 2024 presidential race in south-central Texas. The circles represent results by precinct – the bigger the circle, the bigger the margin of victory for either Democrats or Republicans. Here are two of the congressional seats Democrats hold in the area. Kamala Harris easily carried both of them in November. Republicans' new map packs Democrats into district 37 in Austin and another heavily Democratic district in San Antonio. It cracks the remaining Democrats in San Antonio into new GOP-friendly district 35 that Donald Trump would have won in November by 12 points. Democrats hold three congressional districts in Dallas Fort Worth, here are two of them. The proposed map packs Democratic voters into district 33 and another heavily Democratic district in Dallas. The remaining democrats are cracked into rural far-flung district 32 that Trump would have won by nearly 18 pts. Guardian graphic. Sources: Redistricting Data Hub, Texas Legislative Council. Republicans are redrawing the map amid a four-year legal battle over the districts that are already in place. That suit, filed by a coalition of Latino voting organizations, advocacy groups and voters, argues that Texas's current congressional map diminishes the influence of non-white voters, who accounted for 95% of the state's population growth. 'The current map is already egregiously gerrymandered,' said Marina Jenkins, the executive director of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, which opposes the redraw in Texas. 'The proposed new gerrymander, and even more extreme gerrymander, adds even more insult to that injury, Black voters and Latino voters will have even less opportunity to have their political will considered on an equal basis.' The new map replaces several districts where Hispanic and other non-white voters had been electing Democrats with majority-Hispanic districts that favor Republicans. It would increase the number of districts where white people comprise a majority from 22 to 24, according to an analysis by the Texas Tribune. It would also create an additional Hispanic-majority district, and two new Black-majority districts. 'The gambit by Republicans here is to actually increase the number of Hispanic majority districts in terms of population share, but to diminish the opportunities of Hispanic voters to elect their candidates of choice,' Wasserman said. 'Because there are a number of Hispanic majority districts where Democratic-leaning Hispanic voters will be outnumbered by a coalition of conservative Hispanic voters and white voters.' Simply adding additional majority-Hispanic districts isn't enough to evade scrutiny under the Voting Rights Act, said Thomas A Saenz, the president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which is representing plaintiffs challenging the existing maps. If certain conditions are met, the Voting Rights Act requires states to draw districts that give minority groups the chance to elect their preferred candidates. 'When a line drawer draws majority Latino district but in such a way that it knows will not actually elect the candidates of choice of the Latino community that may be a violation of the Voting Rights Act,' he said, speaking generally about the map. 'You can do that by picking areas with large Latino voting population but that historically has a lower voter turnout right others with large Latino population.' 'Pointing to the number of quote unquote majority Latino district does not remotely answer the question of whether you have violated the Voting Rights Act.'


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
JD Vance offers hot take on Sydney Sweeney's 'attractiveness' amid woke jeans ad drama
Vice President JD Vance chimed in on the furious debate over an American Eagle ad campaign featuring actress Sydney Sweeney. 'My political advice to the Democrats is continue to tell everybody who thinks Sydney Sweeney is attractive is a Nazi. That appears to be their actual strategy,' Vance joked in an interview published Friday. Speaking on The Ruthless Podcast, the vice president ridiculed the left and Democrats for their reaction to the ad campaign that featured Sweeney and the slogan 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' Critics on the left accused the ad's message as racist and compared it to 'Nazi propaganda' because of the pun using jeans with genes. One MSNBC producer wrote that the ad showed 'an unbridled cultural shift toward whiteness.' Vance joked that the Democrats had not learned anything from the previous election in their loss to Donald Trump. 'It actually reveals something pretty interesting about the Dems, though, which is that you have like a normal, all-American beautiful girl doing like a normal jeans ad, right?' he said. 'To try to sell, you know, sell jeans to kids in America, and they have managed to so unhinge themselves over this thing,' he added. In the ad, Sweeney wears all denim and says, 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color.' 'My jeans are blue,' she adds in the viral ad campaign. Vance said he thought Democrats would try to be 'less crazy' in the future. 'The lesson they have apparently taken is we're going to attack people as Nazis for thinking Sydney Sweeney is beautiful. Great strategy, guys,' he joked. 'That's how you're going to win the midterms.' Especially young American men.' The White House also criticized the left's backlash to the ad, describing it as 'cancel culture run amok.' 'This warped, moronic and dense liberal thinking is a big reason why Americans voted the way they did in 2024. They're tired of this bullshit,' wrote White House communications manager Steven Cheung on social media earlier in the week. Ashley Schapiro, Vice President of marketing at American Eagle revealed on LinkedIn after the ad campaign went viral that Sweeney was 'game' to 'push' the campaign into controversial territory. 'Syd's sentiment guided every frame, every stitch and every unexpected twist of The 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans' campaign,' Schapiro revealed, ' Infusing our own personal cheeky energy and making us laugh as we envisioned how the world would experience the launch,' she said. Schapiro heralded the team behind the spot for creating 'a moment in culture ... a wink.'


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump envoy visits Gaza amid war of words over 'starvation' claims - as Germany, France, Spain, Jordan and UAE join forces to airdrop supplies
Donald Trump 's special envoy Steve Witkoff inspected a food distribution centre in war-torn Gaza today amid an escalating war of words over 'starvation' claims. The UN has warned that widespread famine is a looming threat in the besieged strip and claims hundreds of Palestinians have been shot while trying to collect aid near distribution sites. But Israel insists that Gaza is not facing starvation and says Hamas is responsible for the looting of aid. The US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, posted on X that he and Witkoff had gone to Gaza 'to learn the truth' about the private aid sites run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is supported by the United States. 'We received briefings from IDF (the Israeli military) and spoke to folks on the ground. GHF delivers more than one million meals a day, an incredible feat!' Huckabee said. 'Hamas hates GHF because it gets food to people without it being looted by Hamas.' The foundation, on its own X account, posted that it had been a 'privilege and honor' to host Witkoff and Huckabee as the group delivered its 100-millionth meal in Gaza, fulfilling Trump's 'call to lead with strength, compassion and action'. Witkoff's visit comes as Germany, France, Spain, Jordan, and UAE have joined forces to airdrop supplies into the Palestinian territory. France on Friday started to air-drop 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza as it urged Israel to allow full access to the area which it said was slipping into famine. 'Faced with the absolute urgency, we have just conducted a food airdrop operation in Gaza. 'Thank you to our Jordanian, Emirati, and German partners for their support, and to our military personnel for their commitment,' President Emmanuel Macron wrote on social media platform X. 'Airdrops are not enough. Israel must open full humanitarian access to address the risk of famine,' he added. A global hunger monitor said on Tuesday that a famine scenario was unfolding in the Gaza Strip, with malnutrition soaring, children under five dying of hunger-related causes and humanitarian access severely restricted. Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot earlier in the day had told broadcaster franceinfo that France was sending four flights carrying 10 tonnes of humanitarian aid each to Gaza from Jordan. France participated six times in the European humanitarian airlift set up in mid-October 2023 by the European Union to Jordan and Egypt to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza, Macron's office said. The European airlift enabled the organisation of more than 60 flights carrying over 3,350 tons of humanitarian cargo, with most of the donations in-kind transiting through Egypt and Jordan, according to Macron's office. Part of this aid has still not entered Gaza due to a lack of agreement from the Israeli authorities, the president's office said. The UN's rights office in the Palestinian territories said at least 1,373 people had been killed seeking aid in Gaza since May 27 - 105 of them in the last two days of July. 'Most of these killings were committed by the Israeli military,' the UN office said, breaking down the death toll into 859 killed near the US-backed food sites and 514 along routes used by UN and aid agency convoys. In its report on the GHF centres on Friday, Human Rights Watch accused the Israeli military of illegally using starvation as a weapon of war. 'Israeli forces are not only deliberately starving Palestinian civilians, but they are now gunning them down almost every day as they desperately seek food for their families,' said Belkis Wille, associate crisis and conflict director at Human Rights Watch. 'US-backed Israeli forces and private contractors have put in place a flawed, militarised aid distribution system that has turned aid distributions into regular bloodbaths.' A Palestinian woman in northern Gaza's Jabalia gestures at a plane conducting an airdrop of aid in the Israel-besieged Palestinian territory on August 1, 2025 Responding to the report, the military said GHF worked independently, but that Israeli soldiers operated 'in proximity to the new distribution areas in order to enable the orderly delivery of food'. It accused Hamas of trying to prevent food distribution and said that it was conducting a review of the reported deaths, adding it worked to 'minimise, as much as possible, any friction between the civilian population' and its forces. After arriving in Israel on Thursday, Witkoff held talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over how to resolve the almost 22-month-old war, feed desperate civilians and free the remaining hostages held by Palestinian militants. Netanyahu has vowed to destroy Hamas and free the captives, but is under international pressure to end the bloodshed that has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians and threatened many more with famine. Following his discussions with Witkoff, Netanyahu met Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul of Germany, another staunch Israeli ally, who nonetheless delivered a blunt message. 'The humanitarian disaster in Gaza is beyond imagination,' Wadephul told reporters after the meeting, urging the government 'to provide humanitarian and medical aid to prevent mass starvation from becoming a reality'. 'I have the impression that this has been understood today,' he added. Meanwhile, Slovenia has become the first country in the European Union to ban all weapons trade with Israel over its war on Gaza. It said it was moving ahead 'independently' because the EU was 'unable to adopt concrete measures … due to internal disagreements and disunity'. Amid the devastating war in Gaza, where 'people … are dying because humanitarian aid is systematically denied them', it was the 'duty of every responsible state to take action, even if it means taking a step ahead of others'. It added that the government had not issued any permits for the export of military weapons and equipment to Israel since October 2023 because of the conflict.