WASHINGTON — Democrats took to the Senate floor Wednesday to deliver impassioned speeches denouncing the Justice Department's attempt to indict a group of lawmakers who last year urged U.S. military members to resist ''illegal orders,'' framing the episode as a dire test for their chamber and the rule of law.
''The fact that they failed to incarcerate a United States senator should not obviate our outrage. They tried to incarcerate two of us,'' said Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii. ''I am not entirely sure the United States Senate can survive this if we do not have Republicans standing up.''
Schatz was among a string of Democratic senators who spoke a day after a Washington grand jury declined to indict six Democratic lawmakers, including Sens. Elissa Slotkin and Mark Kelly, over a 90-second video that drew fierce backlash from President Donald Trump.
While Democrats blasted the Trump administration, they also challenged their Republican colleagues to speak out. Sen. Chris Murphy called it a ''test for the Senate'' that ''could break this institution permanently.''
Earlier Wednesday, Slotkin and Kelly praised the grand jury's decision, with Slotkin saying that ''if things had gone a different way, we'd be preparing for arrest.''
''A group of anonymous Americans upheld the rule of law and determined that this case should not proceed,'' she said.
The failed indictments mark a high-profile setback for the Justice Department, which has faced mounting scrutiny from Democrats and some Republicans over investigations seen as aligned with Trump's political grievances. The episode has raised stark First Amendment questions about the potential prosecution of sitting members of Congress for their speech.
''This is not a good news story,'' Kelly said. ''This is a story about how Donald Trump and his cronies are trying to break our system in order to silence anyone who lawfully speaks out against them.''