CNN’s Abby Phillip recently interviewed Rep. Jasmine Crockett (R-TX), delving into her use of strong language during a Republican-led House Oversight Committee hearing on President Joe Biden’s impeachment inquiry. Crockett’s choice of words, including the word “shitter,” has sparked discussions.
The hearing, held on Thursday, centered on allegations made by Republicans regarding President Biden’s involvement in his son Hunter Biden’s foreign business dealings, without presenting concrete evidence to substantiate their claims.
During the hearing, Crockett voiced her frustration about Republicans’ seeming indifference to the four criminal indictments faced by former President Donald Trump. One of these indictments pertains to the Department of Justice’s accusation of Trump willfully retaining classified documents upon leaving office and attempting to obstruct their retrieval. The indictment includes photos showing the material stored in Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida, some even in a bathroom.
Abby Phillip introduced the segment by noting, “The word ‘shitter’ has now been entered into the Congressional Record,” before playing a clip of Crockett’s impassioned remarks during the hearing.
Crockett, holding up a photo from Mar-a-Lago, passionately stated, “When we start talking about things that look like evidence, they wanna act like they’re blind. They don’t know what this is. These are our national secrets! Looks like in the shitter to me.”
Phillip asked Crockett why she chose to use such strong language, to which Crockett responded, “To be clear, Nancy Mace continued to use strong language in this hearing.” She was referring to the Republican congresswoman from South Carolina. Crockett defended her approach, saying, “And my attitude is, I will match your energy or exceed it. And I felt like I was going to use a better, you know, way of using the word when I used it. So I did. And that was that.”
Phillip inquired further, asking if matching energy with energy was always the right strategy. Crockett responded by suggesting that those who criticize her approach don’t fully grasp the situation in Congress and the country. She stated, “Right now, I think historically – and I applaud those who have come before me – Democrats have always wanted to be the ones to say, ‘This is how we are supposed to conduct ourselves.’ And they think that just by maintaining that type of decorum, that MAGAs and others will respond and do the same. But they don’t. And so sometimes you’ve got to make sure that they know that you can bring it as well.”
Crockett’s fiery remarks have ignited a debate on the role of language and decorum in congressional hearings and underscored the increasing polarization in political discourse.