JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – A congressional hearing devolved into an angry confrontation between a senator and a witness on Tuesday after Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma challenged Sean O’Brien, the president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, to “stand your butt up” and settle longstanding differences right there in the room.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, the chairman of the Senate panel that was holding the hearing, yelled at Mullin to sit down after he challenged O’Brien to a fight. Mullin had stood up from his seat at the dais and appeared to start taking his ring off.
Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) challenges Teamsters leader Sean O’Brien to a physical fight, standing up midway through a Senate HELP Committee hearing.
Chair Bernie Sanders (I-VT) repeatedly attempts to break them up: “You’re a United States senator.” pic.twitter.com/E4U624cDsS
— The Recount (@therecount) November 14, 2023
“This is the time, this is the place,” Mullin told O’Brien after reading a series of critical tweets O’Brien had sent about him in the past. “If you want to run your mouth, we can be two consenting adults. We can finish it here.”
The two men never came face to face in the hearing room. But they hurled insults at each other for around six minutes as Sanders repeatedly banged his gavel and tried to cut them off. Sanders, a longtime union ally, pleaded with them to focus on the economic issues that were the focus of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing, which Sanders was holding to review how unions help working families.
“You are a United States senator!” Sanders yelled at Mullin at one point.
Mullin, a frequent critic of union leadership, has sparred before with the union head. Earlier this year, O’Brien posted repeatedly about Mullin on X, formerly known as Twitter, calling him a “moron” and “full of s—” after Mullin criticized O’Brien at a hearing for what Mullin said were intimidation tactics.
In another social media post, which Mullin read aloud at Tuesday’s hearing, O’Brien appeared to challenge Mullin to a fight. “You know where to find me. Anyplace, Anytime cowboy,” O’Brien had posted.
The exchange escalated from there, with Mullin telling O’Brien that “this is the place” and asking if he wanted to do it right now.
“I’d love to do it right now,” O’Brien said.
Mullin replied: “Well, stand your butt up then.”
“You stand your butt up,” O’Brien shot back.
When Mullin got up from his chair, appearing ready for a fight, Sanders yelled at him to sit down, banged his gavel several times and told both of them to stop talking.
“This is a hearing, and God knows the American people have enough contempt for Congress, let’s not make it worse,” Sanders said.
As Mullin persisted, O’Brien retorted: “You challenged me to a cage match, acting like a twelve year old schoolyard bully.”
The two traded angry insults for several more minutes — each called the other a “thug” — with Mullin at one point suggesting they fight for charity at an event next spring, repeating an offer he made earlier this year on social media.
O’Brien declined, instead suggesting they meet for coffee and work out their differences. Mullin accepted, but the two kept shouting at each other until the next senator, Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, started her questioning by talking over them.
After the hearing, Sanders called the exchange “absurd.”
“We were there to be talking about, and did talk about, the crisis facing working families in this country, the growing gap between the very rich and everybody else and the role that unions are playing in improving the standard of living of the American people,” Sanders said. “We’re not there to talk about cage fighting.”
Asked later about the skirmish, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell demurred. “It’s very difficult to control the behavior of everybody who is in the building,” McConnell said. “I don’t view that as my responsibility.”
Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota said that references were made to the back-and-forth in a GOP conference meeting after the hearing. But he said that no one should take it too seriously.
“It’s a dynamic place,” Cramer said of the Senate. “We don’t wear the white wigs anymore.”
But that’s not all.
A Tennessee Congressman has accused former GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of a “sucker punch” elbow at the US Capitol. There was also a tense exchange in January between McCarthy and Florida GOP Congressman Matt Gaetz when another politician had to be restrained.
And not to be outdone, GOP Congressman James Comer of Kentucky said Democrat Congressman Jared Moskowitz of Florida looked like a smurf during a hearing on Tuesday.
FSCJ political science professor Daniel Cronrath said these kinds of things aren’t unprecedented in US history but he is shocked it appears to be happening more now.
“Back in the early part of our country in the 1800s our legislature wasn’t nearly as professional. In fact, in 1856 there was a senator who came into the chamber and attacked a senator with a cane, almost beating him to death,” Cronrath said.
Florida GOP Congresswoman Kat Cammack, who represents a large section of our area, weighed in on the chaos.
“Yes, everyone is in fight mode apparently…” she posted along with a gif of someone trying to kick a punching dummy that read “WAS EVERYBODY REALLY KUNG FU FIGHTING?”
It’s definitely not the first time politicians have suggested violence. In 2018, President Joe Biden, who was then a former vice president who had not yet announced his presidential run, traded verbal blows with then-president Donald Trump.
“They asked me would I like to debate this gentleman, and I said no. I said, ‘If we were in high school, I’d take him behind the gym and beat the hell out of him,’” Biden said when responding to Trump’s comments about women.
“He threatens me, for the second time, with physical assault. He doesn’t know me, but he would go down fast and hard, crying all the way,” Trump responded on Twitter.
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