Texas Representative Al Green Removed from House Chamber During President Trump’s Presidential Joint Address of Congress

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Texas Representative Al Green was removed from the House Chamber by Sergeant of Arms during President Donald Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress (FOX 5 Washington). YouTube Tips ⓘ

After Texas Representative waved his cane at the president and inaudibly continued to try to speak over President Donald Trump’s address, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) repeatedly warned the chamber to maintain decorum.

“Members are directed to uphold and maintain decorum in the house, and to cease any further disruptions. That’s your warning,” Johnson said, while the TV camera focused on Green.

“Members are engaging in willful and continuing breach of decorum and the chair is prepared to direct a sergeant at arms to restore order to the joint session … remove this gentleman from The Chamber,” Johnson continue, and Green immediately continued to carry on inaudibly before the Sergeant At Arms escorted him out.

Congressman Al Green (D-Texas) spoke to the media about what he was saying in the House Chamber (Medicare and Social Security issues) after bring escorted out of President Trump’s joint address to Congress on March 4, 2025 (WFAA). YouTube Tips ⓘ

Sergeant at Arms
As an elected officer of the House of Representatives, the Sergeant at Arms is the chief law enforcement and protocol officer of the House of Representatives and is responsible for maintaining order in the House side of the United States Capitol complex. The Sergeant at Arms reviews and implements all issues relating to the safety and security of Members of Congress and the Capitol complex. The Sergeant at Arms also coordinates extensively with the U.S. Capitol Police and various intelligence agencies to assess threats against Members of Congress and the Capitol complex.

Duties include overseeing the House floor and galleries, the House Appointments Desk, the House garages and parking lots, as well as administering all staff identification badges.

The following divisions comprise the Office of the Sergeant at Arms:

Immediate Office/Member Support
Protocol & Special Events
Chamber Operations
House Garages & Parking Security
Information Services
Police Services/Law Enforcement
House Security
Emergency Management
Adminstration

house.gov/the-house-explained/officers-and-organizations/sergeant-at-arms

Cane-waving Al Green was bounced out of the House Chamber by the Sergeant At Arms, and was later condemned and revered on social media (SOURCE: Official Portrait/Public Domain)
Cane-waving Al Green was bounced out of the House Chamber by the Sergeant At Arms, and was later condemned and revered on social media (SOURCE: Official Portrait/Public Domain).

Al Green Biography
In 2004, Al Green won election to the U.S. House of Representatives from the Houston area Ninth District. Rep. Green, a son of the segregated south, born in New Orleans, Louisiana on September 1, 1947, has devoted his life to the elimination of all forms of invidious discrimination and the rectification of America’s seminal sin: slavery. His mother, a maid, and father, a mechanic’s helper, emphasized the importance of an education. Without acquiring an undergraduate degree, he earned his law degree from the Thurgood Marshall School of Law at Texas Southern University in 1974.

Upon graduating from law school, Green cofounded the law firm, Green, Wilson, Dewberry, and Fitch. In 1977, he was appointed justice of the peace in Harris County, Texas, and served until retiring in 2004. For nearly 10 years, Green served as president of the Houston branch of the NAACP. Under his leadership, the organization grew from 500 members to 3,500, expanded its budget, and acquired property to serve as its headquarters. He stepped down as president in 1995.

In 2004, Green, who considers himself a liberated democrat, “unbought, unbossed and unafraid,” entered the congressional race for the newly configured Ninth District. Green ran on his long record of public service in Houston, emerging as the winner in the March Democratic primary with 66 percent of the vote. He prevailed in the general election with 72 percent of the vote.

In the current Congress, Green serves as the ranking member of the Oversight Subcommittee of the Financial Services Committee

In his first term, Green introduced the Homes for Heroes Act. The bill created a veterans’ affairs position in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to assist veterans experiencing homelessness to find affordable housing. “I am sorry to report, Mr. Speaker,” Green said on the House Floor when the bill came up for debate, “that as many are sleeping in the suites of life, too many are sleeping on the streets of life.” The measure was passed in 2016 when it was included in the Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act and was signed into law.

Green became the first lawmaker to introduce and force a vote on three articles of impeachment against President Donald J. Trump in the 115th and 116th Congresses. When the House finally passed articles of impeachment in 2019 and 2021, Green voted for all of them.

Supported by his Texas Democratic Congressional Colleagues and both United States Senators from Texas, Green recommended Attorney Gregg Costa in 2011 as well as Federal Magistrate George Hanks and Harris County District Court Judge Al Bennett in 2014 for Federal District Court Judgeships. Additionally in 2014, Green recommended Judge Gregg Costa be elevated to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. All three were nominated by President Obama and confirmed by the Senate to their respective benches.

In December 2020, Green’s legislation establishing an Emergency Capital Investment Program became law as part of the 2021 Consolidated Appropriations Act. The legislation established a $9 billion Emergency Capital Investment Program (ECIP) for minority depository institutions and Community Development Financial Institutions serving low- and moderate-income communities.

In March 2021, Green’s legislation reauthorizing and funding the State Small Business Credit Initiative was included in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. The legislation reauthorized and funded the State Small Business Credit Initiative at $10 billion. The funds expanded access to capital for small businesses still adapting to the pandemic and seeking to create high-quality jobs across the nation. The funding is expected to catalyze $100 billion in private investment for small businesses.

In November 2021, Green’s legislation, H.R. 2689, the Minority Business Resiliency Act, was signed into law as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. The Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) is the only federal agency dedicated solely to the growth of minority businesses. H.R. 2689 permanently codified the MBDA in federal law to promote and administer programs to assist the development and resiliency of minority business enterprises.

This Congress, Representative Green has introduced three resolutions designed to start healing the chasm of racial animus that exists within our nation today. The first of these is the Slavery Remembrance Day resolution, a resolution to create a commemorative day to remember the victims of slavery. The second is a resolution to remove the name of Richard B. Russell, a self-proclaimed white supremacist, from the Russell Senate Office Building. The third is a resolution to create a Cabinet-level Department of Reconciliation which would be tasked with eliminating racism and discrimination in the United States.

During his tenure as a U.S. Representative, Green has been successful in securing over $100 million worth of funding for community projects for the Texas Ninth Congressional District.

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