Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) rallied the U.S. House of Representatives Wednesday and staged a sit-in on the House floor in order to force a vote on gun control. Democrats chanted "No bill, no break" and lawmakers were forced to recess as the Democrats c
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“.@SpeakerRyan @HouseGOP Why have you turned off the House cameras?” tweeted Rep. Judy Chu, D-Calif. “Let the people see! #NoBillNoBreak #NoFlyNoBuy #goodtrouble #DisarmHate”

Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong defended Poe’s decision to recess the House as the sit-in progressed.

“The House cannot operate without members following the rules of the institution, so the House has recessed, subject to the call of the chair,” she said.

A senior House Republican aide said it was worth noting that when House Democrats were in the majority, “they not only shut off the cameras, they actually shut off the lights.”

It was the first time in history that lawmakers in the minority used social media to circumvent the power held by the chamber’s majority party and the first time C-SPAN tapped into a social media resource to bypass the majority’s grip on its operations.

What’s extraordinary for us today is House members are using social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Periscope to show what’s happening on the House floor when it’s not in session.

Howard Mortman, C-SPAN

“We have not done this before,” said Howard Mortman, C-SPAN’s director of communications. “We’ve incorporated social media extensively in our overall coverage. But what’s happening right now, to be able to put on TV Periscope and Facebook Live video to this extent, is the first time we’ve ever done this for our coverage of the House.”

“What’s extraordinary for us today is House members are using social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Periscope to show what’s happening on the House floor when it’s not in session.”

Democratic senators also took up positions in the House to express their solidarity. Among the senators who took seats on the floor were Cory Booker of New Jersey, Al Franken of Minnesota, Claire McCaskill of Missouri, Patty Murray of Washington and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.

“House Democrats are doing the right thing,” said McCaskill, who was on the losing side in Senate efforts to pass limits on gun purchases by suspected terrorists. “It’s a simple proposition: If you’re suspected of terrorist activity and can’t fly, you shouldn’t be able to buy a gun. A vote on that is a reasonable request. And what’s particularly disappointing is to see Republican leadership turn off the cameras.”

The sit-in initially was conceived as a symbolic act by the Congressional Black Caucus before a scheduled news conference where they were to call on Republican leaders of the House to allow votes on gun control legislation. But what started as a small uprising grew into something bigger as one House member after another took to the floor to speak.

Rep. Lois Frankel, a second-term Democrat from West Palm Beach, Florida, said she thought of her son as soon as she heard about the deadly Orlando violence.

“Before I am a politician, I am a mom,” she said. Then repeating the locations of other mass shootings, she added, “So today I demand action for the mom in Aurora who sent her child to the movies, for the mom whose children went to pray in Charleston, for the mom in Orlando whose child went out for a night of celebration.”

This is not the first time House Democrats have staged a sit-in on Capitol Hill. Democrats refused to leave the chamber without coming to an agreement on how to end a partial shutdown of the government in 1995. Freshman Democrats seized the floor in 1973 to express their views on a spending veto during an era when freshman lawmakers were encouraged to be seen and not heard.

James Rosen, Teresa Welsh and Elizabeth Koh contributed to this report.

Lindsay Wise, 202-383-6048 @lindsaywise

Maggie Ybarra, 202-383-6048 @MolotovFlicker