, who used the magic minute in 1909|alt=Clark dressed in a suit and tie and furry top-hat with an austere expression The custom has been used by leaders of both parties.
Champ Clark, the minority leader in 1909, spoke for five hours and fifteen minutes against tax reforms; this remained the record for over a hundred years. In June 2009, minority leader
John Boehner spoke for under two hours opposing an energy bill, the
American Clean Energy and Security Act. In February 2018, to speak for a then-record of eight hours and seven minutes, calling for legislation protecting
DREAMers. Much of the speech was spent reading their letters; the feat was called "pretty darned impressive" by
Republican Speaker of the House
Paul Ryan, who highlighted her use of
high heels throughout the speech. In November 2021, Republican minority leader
Kevin McCarthy used the magic minute to speak for eight hours and thirty-two minutes, prior to the passage of President
Joe Biden's
Build Back Better bill. During the speech, McCarthy mentioned how he became a Republican partly because of President
Jimmy Carter's penchant for wearing sweaters Other talking points included how he wished he "could have been in
Tiananmen Square and... there
knocking down the Berlin Wall", and how he could not "even afford to test drive a
Tesla, and
Elon is one of [his] best friends." In the aftermath of McCarthy's speech, breaking the record for longest in the House's modern history, White House Press Secretary
Jen Psaki remarked that he did not talk about
climate change or
child care costs, despite the length of the speech. ==See also==