海角大神

Why couldn't Rep. Bobby Rush wear hoodie on House floor?

A hoodie won't fly on the House floor, where dress code mandates no hats 鈥 and a hoodie counts as a hat, even when its used to bring attention to Trayvon Martin.

|
Reuters
In this still image taken from video, US Representative Bobby Rush, a prominent civil rights activist during the 1960s, pulls on the hood of a gray sweatshirt, known as a hoodie during a floor speech in the House of Representatives in Washington March 28.

Hoodies on the House floor are verboten, apparently. Rep. Bobby Rush (D) of Illinois was scolded and escorted from the chamber of the House of Representatives on Wednesday morning, when he attempted to give a speech on the need for a full investigation of the Trayvon Martin shooting while wearing sunglasses and a gray hooded sweat shirt.

鈥淩acial profiling has to stop, Mr. Speaker,鈥 said Representative Rush while doffing his suit jacket to reveal his hoodie garb. 鈥淛ust because someone wears a hoodie does not make them a hoodlum.鈥

Rush continued to speak while the presiding officer, Rep. Gregg Harper (R) of Mississippi, banged the gavel, ordering him to desist. Eventually someone from the office of the House sergeant-at-arms appeared and escorted Rush, hoodie and all, off the floor.

The reason for the uproar is that Congress has a dress code. Men are expected to wear coats and ties, and women to wear correspondingly serious clothing. Under, hats are prohibited, and a hoodie is unquestionably a head covering.

鈥淭he Sergeant-at-Arms is charged with the strict enforcement of this clause,鈥 concludes that section.

Senior Democrats played down the kerfuffle. Minority leader Nancy Pelosi noted that when she first came to Congress, women were prohibited from wearing pants on the floor. But really, why should the House be such a stickler on items of dress? In the 1830s and 1840s 鈥 admittedly, a much more heated era in US history 鈥 many lawmakers carried weapons, and violence was not uncommon. In some Asian legislatures today, debates can end in fistfights.

The reason for the rules on decorum may be that civility stands on a slippery slope.

鈥淎s [humorist] Will Rogers observed, members call themselves gentlemen and gentlewomen, because the alternatives would be to call one another polecats and coyotes, or worse, liars, hypocrites, stupid, dumb, demagogues, socialists, communists, none of which lend themselves to the deliberative process so important to the governance of the nation,鈥 , director of the Robert C. Byrd Center for Legislative Studies at Shepherd University in Shepherdstown, W.Va., last October.

Mr. Smock, who served as historian of the House from 1983 to 1995, believes that civility now 鈥渋s at one of the lowest ebbs in congressional history.鈥

Such breaches of decorum as the 鈥淵ou lie!鈥 shout of Rep. Joe Wilson (R) of South Carolina during President Obama鈥檚 2009 speech to Congress on health-care reforms may be indicative of a larger, paralyzing incivility based on bitter partisanship, in Smock鈥檚 view.

Narrower measures indicate that Congress may be becoming more civil, not less. An Annenberg Public Policy Center study of the number of times lawmakers are reprimanded for out-of-bounds language by having their words 鈥渢aken down鈥 found that infractions have become relatively few and farther between.

鈥淥verall, civility, not incivility, is the norm in the House,鈥 said the September 2011 report.

All that said, Rush had particular incentive to speak out on the Trayvon Martin issue. A former member of the 1960s Black Panthers, Rush was active in the civil rights movement of the era. His own 29-year-old son died of a gunshot.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Why couldn't Rep. Bobby Rush wear hoodie on House floor?
Read this article in
/USA/Politics/The-Vote/2012/0328/Why-couldn-t-Rep.-Bobby-Rush-wear-hoodie-on-House-floor
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe