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McConnell’s power play boosts Warren

Democrat gains status among liberals after being silenced on the Senate floor

- By Erica Werner

WASHINGTON — The turbulent national debate over race, gender and free speech consumed the normally staid Senate on Wednesday after the GOP majority voted to silence Sen. Elizabeth Warren, abruptly elevating her celebrity status at a moment when liberals are hungry for a leader to take on Donald Trump.

The highly unusual rebuke of the Massachuse­tts Democrat came as the Senate weighed President Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney general, GOP Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, who was confirmed, 52-47, on a nearly party-line confirmati­on Wednesday night. It also gave frustrated Democrats a rallying cry weeks into a presidency that is dividing the country like few before.

“I certainly hope that this anti-free speech attitude is not traveling down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to our great chamber,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York warned as Democrats jumped at an opening to link the GOP’s conduct to that of Trump himself. “This is not what America is about — silencing speech, especially in this chamber.”

Republican­s argued they were just trying to enforce necessary rules of decorum in a Senate that is a last bulwark of civil debate in an angry nation.

“I hope that maybe we’ve all been chastened a little bit,” chided the No. 2 Senate Republican, John Cornyn of Texas. “We’re at a pretty challengin­g time in our nation’s history when many people who were surprised and disappoint­ed at the last election are unwilling to accept the results. I only hope that after the passage of some time they will return to their senses.”

But the debate immediatel­y took on overtones of race and gender.

Warren was rebuked as she was reading a letter by Martin Luther King Jr.’s widow, Coretta Scott King, opposing Sessions’ ultimately unsuccessf­ul nomination to a federal judgeship in 1986. Subsequent­ly several male Democratic senators stood up and read from the same letter but without drawing objections, leading Democratic activists to proclaim that Senate Republican­s were interested only in silencing a woman.

The moment inspired a Twitter hashtag, #LetLizSpea­k, and clips from CSPAN2 went viral. “By silencing Elizabeth Warren, the GOP gave women around the world a rallying cry,” fellow Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris of California said over Twitter.

Warren was chastised under a little-used Senate regulation, Rule 19, which bars any senator from impugning the motives of any other or imputing “any conduct or motive unworthy or unbecoming of a senator.”

The Senate historian’s office could not immediatel­y say when the rule was last invoked, but Democrats accused Republican­s of selectivel­y enforcing it. They noted the GOP did not apply it when, for example, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas accused Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of lying in relation to a dispute over the Export-Import Bank two years ago.

This time, Warren drew a warning from the presiding officer as she quoted Tuesday evening from a letter written by the late Sen. Ted Kennedy of Massachuse­tts that referred to Sessions as “a disgrace.” She continued with her speech, and began quoting from Coretta Scott King’s letter and an accompanyi­ng statement that accused Sessions, a federal prosecutor at the time, of using the power of his office to “chill the free exercise of the vote by black citizens.”

Democrats are portraying Sessions as a threat to civil rights, voting rights and immigratio­n; Republican­s have defended Trump’s choice to be the top law enforcemen­t officer as a man of integrity.

McConnell stood and invoked Rule 19, saying that Warren has “impugned the motives and conduct of our colleague from Alabama” in quoting the words from Mrs. King.

Warren, meanwhile, seen as a possible presidenti­al candidate in 2020 along with a handful of other Senate colleagues, was given an even bigger platform to assail Sessions, the GOP and Trump. By midafterno­on Wednesday she had raised more than $286,000 for her re-election campaign from more than 10,500 MoveOn members alone, the liberal group said.

Democrats challenged McConnell’s ruling, but the GOP majority voted to uphold it, barring Warren from speaking on the floor throughout the remainder of the debate over Sessions.

“She was given an explanatio­n. Neverthele­ss, she persisted,” McConnell said in words that sparked still more outrage and Twitter hashtags.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., reacts Wednesday to being rebuked by the Senate.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., reacts Wednesday to being rebuked by the Senate.

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