- Record: Senate Floor
- Section type: Executive business
- Chamber: Senate
- Date: May 19, 2026
- Congress: 119th Congress
- Why this source matters: This section came from the Senate floor portion of the record.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, if you follow the U.S. Senate priority agenda, you are realizing at this moment in time, we are in the midst of a national emergency—a national emergency. What would you guess that would be? The war in Iran? Well, certainly, when it cost America 14 lives at least at this point and when you have billions of dollars being spent. I believe the figures—the latest one reported was $29 billion. Is that the national emergency? No.
- Is the national emergency in the Senate the pending invasion of Cuba?
- No.
the cost of living across the United States? No, that is not the national emergency.
leaders? It was $5.49 a gallon in Chicago last weekend. But that is not it.
prices? No, that is not on the Republican agenda as a national emergency.
billionaire boondoggle ballroom—ballroom. America desperately needs a new ballroom, and they are asking for $1 billion—$1 billion—to build it.
business leaders were going to pay for this, not the taxpayers. Well, that has all changed.
Trump's personal pet project, his gold-plated ballroom, as currently written cannot be included in the Republicans' partisan budget reconciliation bill before the Senate. To that, I say thank heavens.
were not going to pay for this ballroom. How quickly he retreated on his word and asked taxpayers to cough up $1 billion—another broken promise.
by Senate Democrats is a win for the American people across the country, but don't kid yourself—Senate Republicans are already back to the drawing board for this ballroom emergency which we face, attempting to revise the provision so it can be included in the reconciliation bill.
and at the gas station. Republicans have shown where their priorities lie: appeasing the President and writing him a blank check for a new ballroom and a mass deportation campaign.
This much we know: When President Trump has his way with his billion- dollar ballroom emergency project, there will continue to be no room on the Trump dance card for America's working families.
tariffs, is squeezing American families hard—in housing, groceries, and fuel costs and utility bills; inflation that surged to 3.8 percent—the highest level since the pandemic and is outpacing wage growth.
In Illinois, drivers are paying more than $5 a gallon for gas—as I mentioned, last week, $5.49 a gallon in Chicago. Illinois electricity bills are up by more than 15 percent on President Trump's watch, and grocery prices had the biggest 1-month jump in nearly 4 years. Fresh vegetables are 44 percent more expensive than they were just 3 months ago. Ask the shoppers at your local stores; they know this personally.
I recently heard from a constituent of mine from Southern Illinois: Reverend Dr. Anthony Paulson. He wrote about the cost-of-living issues. Reverend Paulson told me that, as a pastor, he witnesses the impact of rising costs on his family, friends, and neighbors. Residents come to his church seeking help with the cost of food, housing, and gas to meet their basic needs. The reverend said he offers the church's compassion and support to anyone in need, but the church and the people he serves have been stretched thin, thanks to the across-the-board price hikes we have under the Trump administration.
who have called my office to sound the alarm whenever I cast a vote in regard to this issue.
hardships “even a little bit.” He continued:
I don't think about Americans' financial situation. I don't
think about anybody.
President Trump.
- concerns or the concerns of the people he serves.
Department of Justice settled a $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service. What did the President get because of this settlement? A so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund of nearly $1.8 billion. And what will this money from the taxpayers be used for? The administration says it is for, “victims of lawfare and weaponization.”
Hold on to your hats and let me tell you the whole story. The whole story starts here on January 6. I was seated in my chair. The other Senators were seated. We were counting the electoral votes.
presiding. It was about 2 p.m., at which point the Secret Service came through that door, grabbed the Vice President from where he was sitting in that chair, and removed him from this room.
Police came before us in uniform and said: Stay in this room, there is a mob outside, but we will make this a protected safe room.
Not 10 minutes later that same officer came before us and said: Cancel everything I said. Evacuate as quickly as possible.
escape the mob that was invading the U.S. Capitol building where we meet today. It was the most amazing thing to happen in this building since the invasion of the British in the War of 1812. Those of you who have any questions as to whether it actually occurred, look at the video, look at the proof, look at the evidence. The net result was a melee that almost cost more than two or three human lives.
Members of Congress, protecting the Vice President of the United States, and protecting visitors to the Capitol from the mob that President Trump sent to make an impression on the Capitol and the people who were working here. Over 140 instances where these mobsters and insurrectionists beat up the local police who had their lives on the line. You can see the videos. Don't believe a word I said, take a look at the videos and judge for yourself.
- individuals were arrested and prosecuted for crimes committed that day.
- Many of them ended up in jail as they should have.
term? On his first day in office, he gave full and unconditional pardons to all of those mobsters and insurrectionists who invaded the Capitol and attacked our police force. Attacked our police force. Members on the other side come to the floor and talk about who has respect for the police, not one word was said in opposition to the President's full and unconditional pardon to these people who attacked our local police doing their job. Two people as a result of that, two of our officers, died in subsequent days from the trauma that they endured. That is the reality.
Now, what does the President want to do? What has been the promise from the start? We are not only going to release full and unconditionally all of those arrested as an insurrectionist mob on the Capitol. We are going to give them compensation.
this new MAGA slush fund of $1.8 billion? That money is headed to the pockets of the individuals who crashed this Capitol. Can you think of anything worse, any incentive to attack police worse than that? I can't think of it.
already said they are going to apply for compensation. They are going to ask for money to be paid to them for committing a crime. Forget that working people are paying more for gas and they still haven't seen a dime in refunds in Trump's illegal tariffs that pushed up the prices of groceries and clothes and appliances. The President is making sure that those who fought to undermine a free and fair election and those who attacked this Capitol building cashed in, not the hard-working families of America who are struggling mightily to get by.
priorities are. Democrats will fight this unprecedented and unacceptable slush fund, and this week, we will continue to push back on Republicans' partisan reconciliation bill and billionaire ballroom emergency bill every step of the way.
ballroom, his arches, God only knows what he will dream up next, and his mass deportation campaign. And when this bill comes to the floor later this week, the Republicans get to go on record on exactly what their priorities are going to be moving forward. Will our Republican colleagues support our efforts to drive down these family costs, or will they side with President Trump?
previous speaker on the Republican side. He said that we don't have any respect for law and order and the policemen and law enforcement officials who enforce it. This MAGA slush fund of $1.8 billion for those who came into the Capitol and sacked this building and did their darndest to hurt our law enforcement agents speaks for itself.
enforcement deserve our respect, and they should be held to the same standards in the Capitol and in the Federal Government as they are held in every State. I don't know of any masked State troopers in my State or in Wyoming. They don't wear masks because they are proud of what they do for a living. Whereas, the ICE agents are just the opposite; they are hiding their identity. And the Republicans want to protect them. I don't understand why.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.