Senator's marathon health law speech

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 September 2013 | 20.24

25 September 2013 Last updated at 12:48 ET
US Senator Ted Cruz speaks on the Senate floor on Capitol Hill in Washington, on 25 September 2013

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Senator Ted Cruz reads a popular children's story to fill the time during his marathon anti-Obamacare speech

After more than 21 hours, Republican Senator Ted Cruz has finished speaking against the Obama health law, amid bipartisan attempts to avert a looming government shutdown.

The Tea Party Texan's filibuster-style oratory continued through the night, after he vowed to speak "until I am no longer able to stand".

Some of Sen Cruz's own Republican colleagues accused him of political grandstanding, warning it could backfire if the government does shut down next week, as scheduled.

Congress has until 1 October to pass a temporary budget bill to keep federal agencies running.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives last week passed its own version of the spending measure.

Nazis evoked

Lawmakers in that chamber inserted a provision - largely at the behest of Sen Cruz and his Tea Party allies - that would strip funds from President Barack Obama's 2010 healthcare bill.

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Some Republicans despair of both Sen Ted Cruz's tactics and his ego. But he won't care - he has embraced Sen John McCain's description of him as a "wacko bird". Reading Dr Seuss' Green Eggs and Ham from the Senate floor can only elevate him from Daffy Duck to Roadrunner in the esteem of his public admirers.

Some Republicans think what he is doing is either pointless or dangerous. Pointless because this is not a classic filibuster - it stands no chance of actually killing the bill. Beyond that, it is odd, because the bill he is delaying couples paying the government's bills to defunding Obamacare.

That linkage is a core conservative tactic, which Mr Cruz himself agrees with. As Dr Seuss once wrote: "From there to here, from here to there, funny things are everywhere!"

That part will be removed from the version in the Senate, which on Wednesday held a procedural test vote on the matter, voting 100-0 to take up the House bill.

If, as expected, the Senate revises the House bill, the House will then have to decide whether to pass that bill or find a compromise with the Senate. They have until next Tuesday to avert a shutdown.

Sen Cruz, who began talking at 14:41 local time (18:41 GMT) on Tuesday, held the floor for 21 hours and 19 minutes, but had to yield at midday. It was the fourth-longest speech in Senate history.

Analysts say his marathon talk was a mainly symbolic gesture of defiance, rather than a filibuster - a tactic made famous by the 1939 Jimmy Stewart film, Mr. Smith Goes To Washington - as it could not hold up Senate proceedings.

Republicans sympathise with Sen Cruz's attempts to neuter the health law, which they label Obamacare.

But many deem his strategy to be politically unfeasible as long as Democrats control the Senate and White House.

With an eye on next year's midterm congressional elections, a number of Republicans are also concerned that voters might blame them for the havoc that results from any government shutdown.

Forgoing his cowboy boots for tennis shoes, Sen Cruz, a potential 2016 presidential candidate, railed all night against the Obama health law, calling it the country's "biggest jobs killer" and comparing his struggle to the fight against the Nazis, or the American Revolution.

'Bad haircuts'

To fill the time, the first-term senator covered a range of subjects, sharing with the largely empty chamber his penchant for the mini-hamburgers at fast-food chain White Castle; quoting from a reality television show, Duck Dynasty, as well as lyrics by country singer Toby Keith; and praising a recent speech by actor Ashton Kutcher on the value of hard work.

Senator Ted Cruz speaks on Senate floor

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Ted Cruz: "Neville Chamberlain told the British people to accept the Nazis"

At one point on Tuesday night, Sen Cruz read bedtime stories - including the Dr Seuss favourite, Green Eggs and Ham - to his two young daughters, who he said were watching at home.

He also poked fun at fellow lawmakers: "Almost all of us are in cheap suits with bad haircuts. Who cares?"

Several Tea Party allies, including Senators Marco Rubio and Rand Paul, gave Sen Cruz some respite by taking to the lectern in his support.

Under the chamber's rules, Sen Cruz was allowed to give way to colleagues for long-form questions, but could not leave the floor or sit down while his speech was under way.

He took advantage of the break by strolling, stretching and leaning against desks.

But the top two Republicans in the Senate, Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn, refused to back him.

Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid dismissed Mr Cruz's speech on Wednesday.

"For lack of a better way of describing this, it has been a big waste of time," Mr Reid said.

  • The longest filibuster came when US Senator Strom Thurmond spoke against civil rights reforms for 24 hours 18 minutes in 1957
  • US Senator Alfonse D'Amato (above, left) of New York kept going for 23 hours and 30 minutes in an attempt to block a military bill in 1986
  • Robert Byrd (right) of West Virginia spoke against the 1964 Civil Rights Act for 14 hours 13 minutes.
  • Huey Long (centre) of Louisiana discussed the merits of various recipes during his 15-hour filibuster in 1935
  • In March this year, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul criticised US drone policy for nearly 13 hours

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