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Wednesday, September 10, 2025

April 14 sees Congressional Record publish “Maiden Speech (Executive Session)” in the Senate section

Volume 167, No. 64, covering the 1st Session of the 117th Congress (2021 - 2022), was published by the Congressional Record.

The Congressional Record is a unique source of public documentation. It started in 1873, documenting nearly all the major and minor policies being discussed and debated.

“Maiden Speech (Executive Session)” mentioning Jerry Moran, Pat Roberts, and Roger Marshall was published in the Senate section on pages S1909-S1911 on April 14.

Of the 100 senators in 117th Congress, 24 percent were women, and 76 percent were men, according to the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

Senators' salaries are historically higher than the median US income.

The publication is reproduced in full below:

Maiden Speech

Mr. MARSHALL. Mr. President, today I am honored to stand on this hallowed Senate floor and share my gratitude for and the priorities of the people of Kansas.

I want to start by thanking the people of Kansas who believed in me and sent me here to represent them. It is an honor of a lifetime to follow in the steps of heroic Kansans who preceded me in this legislative body. That includes sharing this tour of duty with my long-

time friend whom I have admired for decades and now my senior Senator, Jerry Moran, as well as legends of this Chamber, my mentors Bob Dole and Pat Roberts.

But before I continue, I want to say a special word of gratitude to my family for all of their support. I would not be here today without the support of my wife of 37 years now, Laina, our four children and their spouses, our three grandchildren, as well as my parents, brother, sister, and extended family, who in so many ways have contributed to our campaigns and the work we have done in Congress. I am grateful for their understanding, their unwavering support, and sacrifice of privacy and family time, but, mostly, I am grateful for the values they passed on to me.

I am grateful for the many teachers, coaches, pastors, and personal friends who inspired me and gave me a solid foundation of values that have seen us through tough times. These values provided the foundation for me, a fifth-generation farm kid, to become a first-generation college student and live my American dream as a physician in rural America.

And these values have become pillars, the sturdiest of which in my life are faith, family, community, education, and hard work--a faith that you live in your heart, not wear on your shirt sleeves; a family that loves and stands beside you no matter what; a community where everyone looks out for each other; an education that is the great equalizer, leveling the playing field for all; and, finally, a belief in hard work that paves the way to achieve your American dream.

As I traveled Kansas this past year, I carried these pillars with me while I heard from people all over the State, and they gave three very clear priorities: No. 1, provide for their safety, health, and security; No. 2, to bring back our jobs and economy; and, No. 3, to protect our values and our God-given, inalienable rights.

I am here in the Senate to do just that, to fight for the people of Kansas, for all Americans. But more than anyone else, I am here to fight for our children and grandchildren. And like another great Kansan, the 34th President of the United States, Dwight David Eisenhower, the decisions I make will be most guided by the impact they will have on future generations, not by tonight's news or the simultaneous tweet that goes out as I raise my thumb up or down. History will be the judge of my decisions, not social media.

The motto of the 1st Infantry Division of the U.S. Army, the Big Red One, housed in my home State of Kansas is ``No Mission Too Difficult. No Sacrifice Too Great. Duty First!''

It is with this fighting attitude I intend to fully fund our military; secure our borders; as the son and brother of veterans, and as a veteran myself, honor our commitment to those who protected our freedoms and values; and as the son of a police chief, fully support our law enforcement.

I am so grateful for all law enforcement officers, including those here at the U.S. Capitol. They put their lives on the line every day, and we join the entire Nation in mourning those heroic officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice keeping us safe.

While we too often hear calls to defund the police and weaken our military readiness, we are still a nation of law and order, and we must advance President Reagan's philosophy of peace through strength.

Pre-COVID, we had the strongest economy in my lifetime, thanks to Republican-led policies put into place over the last 4 years. Lower taxes and deregulation resulted in historically low unemployment rates, as well as American energy independence and affordable energy costs. With agriculture being responsible for 40 percent of the Kansas economy, these policies, along with strong trade agreements, provided the tools necessary to ensure our farmers, ranchers, and producers remain profitable and our rural communities prosperous.

But here is what concerns me today. Like my grandma often told me at the family supper table, there are three things you can count on from the current majority party: They will spend a lot of your money. They will raise your taxes. And they will increase regulations. Just like my grandma warned, within the first 3 months of this new administration, we have seen an onslaught of harmful redtape, proposed tax increases, and an unprecedented spending spree.

Fighting government redtape and working to ensure Kansans keep more of their hard-earned money as a means to harness job growth and help our economy recover will be what I work for each day.

Lastly and most importantly, as this is what is keeping me up late at night, I was sent here to protect the Kansas values I was raised on. These values are still held by the majority of Americans, and many of us are tired of being canceled, censured, and lectured to.

I acknowledge we all need to be woke up sometimes--woke up for church on Sundays, woke as a child to help milk the cows on my grandparents' farm--but we certainly don't need the woke mob to shake us out of bed every day.

Like all nations of people, we make plenty of mistakes and we have room to grow, but we Kansans are still proud of our American history. Rather than cancel it, we should embrace it. America has accomplished incredible things and defeated enemies of freedom. We should be proud of our history, hang onto it, and learn from it.

God has given our Nation enormous bounty and blessings to help feed the world, maintain peace, and protect human rights. America has been called upon to be the salt of the Earth and remain a bright, burning candle, not hidden under a bushel.

I believe our country will not fall from another military giant, nor will it succumb to economic failure created from foreign lands. Our greatest risk of failure comes from falling under our own weight if we continue to ignore the self-evident values our forefathers taught us.

Indeed, if we continue paying too much attention to silly hyperbole, social media hype, and political correctness, this Nation will struggle and not be the leader of the free world we were intended to be.

Before I leave the subject of values, I want to share how important and personal the sanctity of life is to me. I had the honor, as an obstetrician, to deliver over 5,000 babies, and I promise I will work as hard in this Chamber to protect the lives of the unborn and our children as I did in the delivery room all those years. I will always lead on this issue and protect our values.

Leadership is the quality I most remember my dad looking for and praising in others, and I have always tried to study and emulate great leaders. To this end, as I sometimes wander the Capitol looking for solitude and inspiration, I am struck by one of my favorite paintings hanging in the Capitol Rotunda.

In this portrait, the artist depicts General George Washington, shortly after the Revolutionary War, surrendering his commission as an officer. And behind Washington, resting on an otherwise empty King's throne, are the robes of a King, the robes he declined.

The leadership lesson is that great leaders don't seize more power when they see the opportunity. Three months into this 117th Congress, it appears that the power grab General Washington declined is now the majority's primary modus operandi. We have seen a record number of Executive orders, the first partisan COVID relief bill, steps to grant DC statehood to tip the scales of power, an attempt to federalize elections and destroy election integrity with H.R. 1, and now a commission to study expanding the Supreme Court.

Like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz watching the grains of sand dropping through the hourglass, additional partisan priorities remain on standby while the timing of dropping the ultimate power grab--the elimination of the filibuster--is carefully weighed.

The filibuster is meant to force both parties to work together to come up with long-lasting policies which help Americans. Without it, we will see tax laws and many other policies go up and down like a roller coaster, creating uncertainty and making it impossible for long-term planning.

We are witnessing what may be the most blatantly hypocritical policy switch we have ever seen, as most all Senators and the President have been on record previously in support of the filibuster. This flip-flop appears to be all in the name of greed and power.

So while I come to the Senate intent on fighting against efforts to weaken our security, harm our economy, and diminish our American values, I also want to discuss what I am for.

My favorite memories of growing up were spent in the great outdoors with the people I love the most: my friends and family. Make no mistake, I will do everything in my power to leave this world cleaner, safer, and healthier than I found it, and this can be accomplished while at the same time maintaining affordable energy.

Whether it is environmental policy or economic policy, we need to level the playing field, both at home and abroad. We must prioritize jobs for Americans, secure our supply chains, and continue to develop fair and reciprocal trade agreements. We must lower the cost of quality healthcare for all Americans. We must stop intellectual property theft, along with economic coercion, forced technology transfer, and cyber espionage.

We must stop counterfeit products and illicit drugs from entering our Nation. In addition, we must stop all censorship, especially the censorship of conservative thought that is under attack.

For our grandchildren's sake, we must modernize our policies surrounding Big Tech and social media before they engulf our society.

So this Nation, still very young in the scheme of world history, we have our challenges, but as long as we stay true to our American values, we will get more right than we get wrong. But we have to learn to forgive our pasts and forgive each other.

Over this Easter break, one of my sons told me something that made my heart go pitter-patter. He said:

Dad, capitalism keeps America at the tip of the spear.

Capitalism keeps America at the tip of the spear. You know, he was spot on. American innovation, our pioneer spirit, and hard work will always lead the way and bring victory over totalitarianism and singular thought and rule.

Each and every American youth and young adult has their own story to write, and my job here is to ensure everyone has their shot at happiness and their shot at their American dream. While we cannot guarantee happiness for any of them, those of us in this Chamber can pave the way with an abundance of opportunity.

As the dreams and stories of so many Americans are interweaved, this American portrait--this tapestry of blues and grays, of pastels and earth tones--will keep this Republic in good shape. It is our diversity that makes us great. As long as we pass on our American values that have seen this Nation through so many dark nights, we will succeed through current and future trials and conflicts.

May God bless this great Republic.

I yield the floor.

The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Republican whip.

SOURCE: Congressional Record Vol. 167, No. 64

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