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© 2026 Govwatch

Floor SpeechNeutral2026-04-15

JACKIE ROBINSON DAY

Jonathan L. Jackson
Jonathan L. Jackson
DIL-1 · Representative
Share:
TaxesDefenseTradeVeterans

Context

On 2026-04-15, Representative Jonathan L. Jackson (D-IL-1) delivered a floor speech titled "JACKIE ROBINSON DAY" in the House. The speech addressed taxes and also covered defense, trade policy.

Full Text

JACKIE ROBINSON DAY

Congressional Record, Volume 172 Issue 66 (Wednesday, April 15, 2026) [Congressional Record Volume 172, Number 66 (Wednesday, April 15, 2026)] [House] [Page H2921] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [ www.gpo.gov ] JACKIE ROBINSON DAY (Mr. JACKSON of Illinois asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute.) Mr. JACKSON of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to honor an American giant and second lieutenant, the Honorable Jackie Robinson. On this Jackie Robinson Day, we remember that when he stepped onto Ebbets Field on April 15, 1947, he broke not only the color barrier, he broke racial segregation in the hierarchy of sports. He forced this Nation to confront its conscience. His courage, discipline, and unshakeable dignity changed baseball forever. More importantly, it changed America for the better. That is why it is disgusting when the Pentagon, under our current leadership, removed mention of Jackie Robinson's military service. Mr. Speaker, you cannot honor American history by erasing the very people who made it: Mr. O'Malley, the owner and Jackie Robinson, the player. Jackie Robinson's legacy is not a DEI to be thrown away. It is patriotism. It is service to the country, and it is sacrifice. It is the truth. Mr. Jackie Robinson was court-martialed for refusing to sit in the back of a segregated bus. You cannot understand American history, Mr. Speaker, without understanding the whole truth. Jackie Robinson proved: Diversity is not a weakness in this country but is one of our greatest strengths. Equity dismantles barriers allowing excellence to rise. Inclusion expands opportunity, so we as a country become stronger. Mr. Speaker, as we tell the full story of America, not a sanitized story, not an edited story, but the full story, we give the next generation the courage to keep pushing forward, to keep breaking barriers, and to speak the truth. Mr. Speaker, I rise today not merely to remember a man, but to summon a truth--one that this Nation has long struggled to face, and longer still to accept. We gather in the shadow and the light of Jackie Robinson, a man who did not simply step onto a baseball field, but stepped into the raging storm of America's conscience. On April 15th, 1947, when he walked onto Ebbets Field, he carried more than a glove and a bat. He carried the weight of a people who had been told, for generations, to wait--to be patient--to accept less. And yet, he did not wait. He did not bow. He did not break. In his silence, there was thunder. In his restraint, there was revolution. Jackie Robinson did not just change baseball. He exposed the lie at the heart of this country--that freedom could be partial, that dignity could be selective, that citizenship could be rationed. And in doing so, he forced America to see itself, perhaps for the first time, as it truly was. And so it is a grave and troubling thing--though not, I must confess, a surprising one--that there are those even now who would dare to diminish his legacy. To erase his service. To tidy up history into something more palatable, more convenient, more false. There is nothing new in this impulse. America has always had talent for forgetting the very people who made it possible. But you cannot honor this country by amputating its memory. You cannot claim patriotism while discarding truth. Jackie Robinson's life was not an accessory to history--it was a reckoning with it. He proved something that this Nation has resisted understanding: that what we call diversity is not a threat, but a revelation; that what we call equity is not charity, but justice; that what we call inclusion is not concession, but the expansion of the American promise itself. For the story of America, if it is to mean anything at all, must be told in full. Not the softened story, not the convenient story, but the whole, difficult, luminous truth. Because only in that truth can we find the courage to continue--to insist that the barriers before us are not permanent, that the limits imposed upon us are not final. Today, we honor Jackie Robinson not only as a ballplayer, but as a witness--as a man who testified, with his life, to the possibility of a more honest Nation. A more just one. And if we are worthy of that testimony, we will remember this: that America is not measured by how well it protects the powerful, but by how fiercely it defends the dignity of all who step forward--against the odds, against the noise, against history itself--to claim their place at the plate. ____________________
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