Every camera pivoted toward him in perfect unison, sensing a moment that did not appear on any schedule but carried the unmistakable weight of something the country would be arguing about for days.
Ilhan Omar paused mid-sentence, her hand frozen above the microphone, as though some invisible force had interrupted the very oxygen she used to speak.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez shifted her weight backward, her heel catching the carpet for a fraction of a second, revealing a rare flash of uncertainty that rippled across her expression like heat on asphalt.
Kennedy exhaled slowly, allowing his voice to emerge not with anger but with a measured, unshakeable clarity that reverberated through the marble like a bell rung in an empty cathedral.
He spoke about duty, about responsibility, about the gravity of positions held not for theatrics but for stewardship, reminding the chamber that the institution existed long before any single personality entered its orbit.
The chamber leaned in collectively, creating a vacuum of silence so profound that even the faint hum of the air-conditioning seemed suddenly intrusive and oddly disrespectful.