The Kiss of Darth: Pedro Pascal Smooches Stephen Colbert While Promoting Family-Friendly S...
Hasan Piker Scoffs at Israeli Govt.’s Plan to File Lawsuit Over Nicholas Kristof’s...
Dem Jasmine Crockett Claims Constitution-Minded SCOTUS Justices Are Partisans Doing Trump’...
Justice Department Investigation Shows Yale Discriminated Against Whites and Asians in Adm...
CIA Accuses Senate Committee of ‘Dishonest Political Theater’ Over Lab Leak Coverup
Tlaib's Endless Nakba Lie: Celebrating Arab Defeat as 'Genocide' While Demanding Israel's...
Cato Stooge: One in Five Fairfax Residents Is or Lives With Someone Who...
NBC News: Dems Are Moving on to a More Combative Style of Politics
Trump Calls Him a Disaster, Dem Ro Khanna Calls Him a Founder’s Ideal:...
Pink Bullhorn Dummy Gets Rare Reprimand: Angie Nixon Turns FL House Floor Into...
Cry More, Marj: Dana Loesch Roasts MTG’s Suspicious Stock Trading Spree and Stock...
Biden’s Secret: He Gave Foreign Workers Homes with ZERO Money Down —...
AP Warns That Revolutionary War-Era Muskets Are Mostly Exempt From Gun Laws in...
Chelsea Handler Laments 'Where Are All the Good Men?' — The Culture That...
Rep. Jamie Raskin Pretends Not to Know What Sanctuary Cities Are

'Mostly peaceful insurrection' at Arizona Capitol shut down Senate business

Friday night after the Supreme Court released the ruling overturning Roe v. Wade there were protests — some violent — in Washington, DC, New York City, Los Angeles and elsewhere. There was also a protest (that might be referred to as an “insurrection” if the activists were on the Right) at the Arizona Capitol building.

Advertisement

State Senator Kelly Townsend was there:

The Arizona Senate called recess in the evening citing security threats:

Senate President Karen Fann abruptly called a recess to Senate work and evacuated lawmakers and staff to the Senate basement after protesters attending a rally after the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade pounded on Senate windows and doors.

“We have a security threat outside,” Fann said, trying to hurry along a handful of public-school supporters who had unfurled a banner expressing their disgust with the Senate’s approval of universal vouchers.

People soon returned to the Senate floor, including guests who had been seated in the Senate’s gallery to watch the voucher vote.

Advertisement

Eventually the Senate was able to reconvene:

The police had their hands full at the Arizona Capitol last night:

There’s a word for it:

Advertisement

And yet the media will go with “mostly peaceful protest.”

Whatever would have ensued, it’s a sure thing that the Democrats wouldn’t have scheduled televised hearings.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement