The Oregon Democrat held the Senate floor for more than 22 hours .
www.nbcnews.com
WASHINGTON — Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., is still speaking on the Senate floor after delivering remarks for more than 16 hours in protest of what he described as President Donald Trump’s "authoritarian" leadership and warning that the republic is facing "the biggest threat" since the Civil War.
"President Trump is shredding our Constitution. Is it okay for masked federal agents to arrest people off the street because of their skin color or their accent? No way, not in a free America," Merkley said in his opening remarks around 6:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday.
The Democratic senator went on to rebuke the Trump administration for other actions, including weaponizing the Department of Justice to
attack his political opponents, including former FBI Director James Comey, New York Attorney General Letitia James and Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and canceling research grants to universities in an attempt to gain control over what can be taught.
On Wednesday morning, the Oregon Democrat said he wanted the public's takeaway from his comments to be that "Tyranny has already arrived. It is not down the street. It is not around the corner. It will not be encountered on the path tomorrow. It is here at this very moment."
He argued that "tyranny comes in two forms," including "the attack on freedom," and he said the disappearance of "the fundamental separation of powers."
"Suddenly, you have the three elements that create tyranny in place of freedom, or authoritarianism in place of a republic," he said. "And those are a rubber-stamp Congress, a deferential court, and an aggressive authoritarian personality with a good plan."
A Merkley aide said Tuesday that the senator is expected to go as long as he can. His speech comes months after Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., delivered marathon remarks for 25 hours and 4 minutes,
breaking the record for the longest floor speech in Senate history.
Merkley's speech comes days after people turned out across the country Saturday for protests against Trump and his administration at No Kings rallies. Since the beginning of the president's second term, Democrats have
faced blowback about not doing enough to counter Trump. In interviews with NBC News, Democratic demonstrators at the No Kings rally in Washington, D.C.,
were still conveying that same frustration with leaders in their party.
Several members of the Democratic caucus have cheered Merkley on through social media.