New York Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries provided a masterclass on leadership and served up a clear reminder of what an up-and-coming senator from Illinois named Barack Obama once did during a divided America.

By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia

Itโ€™s possible that after the bitter campaign for House Speaker ended on January 7th, Americans โ€“ especially Black Americans โ€“ felt a strong sense of dรฉjร  vu.

New York Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries provided a masterclass on leadership and served up a clear reminder of what an up-and-coming senator from Illinois named Barack Obama once did during a divided America.

โ€œProgress asserted itself tonight, manifested in [Hakeem] Jeffries, even amidst a hostile takeover of the House by neoโ€“fascists,โ€ Jason Randolph of Vote.org commented.

Randolph said Jeffries delivered โ€œwhatโ€™s likely the best political speech not given by Obama in generations.โ€

On July 27, 2004, during the Democratic National Convention in Boston, a 42-year-old Barack Obama, who a few months earlier won a Senate primary in Illinois, spoke eloquently and inspiringly about the divide facing America.

โ€œNow even as we speak, there are those who are preparing to divide us, the spin masters, the negative ad peddlers who embrace the politics of โ€˜anything goes,โ€™โ€ Obama asserted.

โ€œWell, I say to them tonight, there is not a liberal America and a conservative America; there is the United States of America. There is not a Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America; thereโ€™s the United States of America.โ€

Nineteen years later, in 2023 where many say politics are as divisive and dangerous as ever, Jeffries, 52, channeled Obama by providing a masterclass on leadership.

He called for โ€œmaturity over Mar-a-Lago,โ€ a direct shot at new House Speaker Kevin McCarthyโ€™s praise of Trump.

Throughout Jeffriesโ€™ speech, Trump supporting Republicans jeered while Democrats rose to applaud the Brooklyn born congressman.

Jeffries smoothly went through the alphabet to capture all the ails America, and whatโ€™s needed to repair the divided nation.

โ€œHouse Democrats will always put American values over autocracy, benevolence over bigotry, the Constitution over the cult, democracy over demagogues,โ€ Jeffries asserted.

โ€œFreedom over fascism, governing over gaslighting, hopefulness over hatred quality of life issues over Qโ€™Anon, reason over racism, substance over slander, triumph over tyranny, understanding over ugliness, and voting rights over voter suppression.โ€

Earlier, the Republican Party did, in fact, select a speaker, albeit grudgingly; however, given the 15 rounds it took for McCarthy to secure the necessary votes, itโ€™s possible that his tenure as speaker wonโ€™t last.

Whether or not McCarthy remains speaker, his ascension to the top post in the chamber is unlikely to be remembered as the 118th Congressโ€™ defining moment.

McCarthy, despite multiple defeats before winning the speakership race and his previous condemnation of former President Trumpโ€™s role in the 2021 insurrection, still praised Trump.

The person elected to lead Congress and look out for Americaโ€™s best interests praised an alleged would-be over thrower of the U.S. government just two years and one day after the Trump-inspired insurrection in which several lives were lost.

Although a congressional committee recommended criminal charges and numerous members of Trumpโ€™s inner circle testified to the committee about the former presidentโ€™s guilt.

McCarthy, upon being presented with the speakerโ€™s gavel, remarked, โ€œI do want to especially thank President Trump.โ€

โ€œDo not doubt, in my opinion; in fact, no one should doubt his influence. He was with me from the beginning. So, thank you, President Trump.

However, two years earlier, McCarthy held that โ€œthe President bears responsibility for Wednesdayโ€™s attack on Congress by mob rioters. He should have immediately denounced the mob when he saw what was unfolding.โ€

McCarthyโ€™s moments aside, many people who watched the inauguration of the 118th Congress said that Jeffries, the first African American to lead a major political party in Congress, demonstrated true leadership.

โ€œMcCarthyโ€™s speech should have contained some of the words Jeffries spoke,โ€ Dean Obeidallah, a lawyer and host of a self-titled SiriusXM show, opined.

โ€œ[McCarthy] should have made it clear he denounces autocracy, fascism and the grave threats facing our democracy by Trump and the MAGA wing of the Republican Party,โ€ Obeidallah insisted.

The radio host wasnโ€™t alone.

โ€œRep. Hakeem Jeffries speaks truth to power,โ€ declared attorney Ben Crump.

โ€œPoliticians must remember that they represent U.S. All of us. Letโ€™s encourage our lawmakers to work together and pass policy that helps all American people and that preserves our democratic form of government,โ€ Crump said.

โ€œThis is what leadership looks like, sounds like and does,โ€ podcaster Chris Hahn tweeted.

Strategist Steve Schmidt added, โ€œThe early morning hours of January 7 marked the rise of a new American leader: Hakeem Jeffries. The thunderclap was the magnificence of his voice rising in defense of the American creed and his taking his place in a long line of libertyโ€™s defenders.โ€

Actor Rob Reiner simplified the outpouring of accolades resulting from Jeffriesโ€™ speech.

โ€œA star is born,โ€ Reiner declared.

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