Elderly Democratic Rep Falls On House Floor Protesting ‘BBB’

While speaking out against President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” tax cut package, an 81-year-old Democratic congresswoman stumbled on the House floor.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) reportedly stumbled during a heated floor debate, where she had been echoing Democratic critiques of what she called Trump’s “big, ugly bill.” The incident occurred after days of marathon negotiations, with lawmakers scrambling to meet the president’s July 4 deadline to deliver the sweeping legislation.

Schakowsky’s remarks came just ahead of a fiery, hours-long filibuster by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), who took full advantage of the House’s “magic minute” rule—allowing a member to speak indefinitely, so long as they remain standing and present.

Jeffries reportedly had several hefty binders stacked before him, each packed with excerpts of the speech he has been delivering without pause.

The advanced age of many Washington, D.C. lawmakers has remained under intense scrutiny from both the public and the media—especially following former President Joe Biden’s disastrous 2024 debate performance and his eventual withdrawal from the race.

Episodes like Schakowsky’s fall have only amplified concerns, keeping the uncomfortable issue in the spotlight amid a punishing and high-stakes legislative session.

Earlier this year, Schakowsky announced she would not run for reelection in 2026, bringing an end to a long career in public service. She has represented her Illinois district in the U.S. House of Representatives since first winning federal office in 1998, following a seven-year stint as a state legislator.

She spent part of Wednesday filming an incendiary message for social media. “I’m not just a no on Trump’s Big Ugly Bill, I’m a HELL NO!” she wrote on X.

“This is going to be the most hideous vote that the Republicans are putting forward that would absolutely take healthcare away from literally millions of people. Why? Because they want to be able to provide more money, more wealth to the richest people in the United States of America,” railed Schakowsky.

“When the bill comes up, consider it a crime scene!” she said with bravado and hands on her hips.

Critics had claimed Trump would never succeed in passing his sweeping tax cut legislation—let alone before the July 4 recess.

But this summer delivered a string of victories for the president, culminating in Thursday’s narrow 218-214 House vote to send the measure—branded the “One Big Beautiful Bill”—to his desk.

With its passage, Trump has now enacted the bulk of his campaign agenda just six months into his second term, the Washington Times noted in an analysis of the president’s first months back in office in what will be his final term.

“Campaigns are filled with promises and ‘most’ administrations are filled with excuses but NOT @Potus, who once again delivered for the American people,” said Mark Meadows, who served as White House chief of staff during Trump’s first term, on X.

The sweeping tax cut legislation delivers on several key pillars of President Trump’s agenda, most notably the permanent extension of the individual tax cuts he first enacted in 2017. It also eliminates most taxes on tips, overtime pay, and Social Security benefits for seniors.

The bill includes major changes to Medicaid, which has ballooned in both size and cost over the past decade. It tightens eligibility rules to exclude unauthorized immigrants and others who don’t qualify, a move projected to reduce Medicaid spending by $1 trillion over the next ten years.

In addition, the legislation allocates $46.5 billion to complete Trump’s long-standing 2016 campaign pledge to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border—a promise left unfinished during his first term.

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