Amid the stalemate this week in the U.S. House to elect a speaker – and thus swear in the new Congressional class – outgoing Rep. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) prepared to hand over her seat to incoming Republican Rep.-elect Cory Mills, after serving in that role for three consecutive terms.
The Florida Democrat – who made history by becoming the first Vietnamese-American woman and only the second Vietnamese American in Congress – flipped a long-held Republican seat, winning her first election in 2016.
A co-chair of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition, Murphy announced in 2021 that she would not seek re-election the following year. But her last act in Congress may be one of the most significant in recent history. She has spent the last 18 months as a member of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“Morning Joe” reporter and Know Your Value contributor Daniela Pierre-Bravo spoke with Murphy before her departure from office, where she shared what led her to pursue a seat in Congress and ultimately, a place on the Jan 6th select committee.
A refugee who never took freedom for granted
“I am somebody who escaped communist Vietnam when I was just a child, and so I’ve never taken for granted the freedoms and democratic values that this country has to offer,” Murphy told Pierre-Bravo. “But those things only exist if its citizens are willing to step up and to defend it, and I know what happened on Jan. 6 doesn’t represent the America I know.”
According to Murphy, her family left post-war Vietnam when she was six months old in 1979. Her parents, facing persecution from the government, fled by boat where they were rescued at sea by the U.S. Navy and eventually offered safe haven in the U.S.
“In hindsight, I wish my fellow Americans would have a little more empathy for people who have the kind of desperation that leads them to leave their homeland,” Murphy explained. “My parents decided that facing oppression from an authoritarian government and persecution and the prospect of no future for their children – they decided that getting on a boat to sea was a better choice – that the fact that we might die in search of light was better than to live on in darkness.”
Murphy’s family settled in Northern Virginia where she grew up. Her parents worked blue collar jobs during the day and cleaned office buildings at night to support her and her brother. “When they got to the United States life wasn’t easy, but they were dedicated to this country,” she said. “They were dedicated to making good of the opportunity that they were given and they imbued in us as their children those same sets of values that you give back to a country that gave you so much.”
Throughout her political career, Murphy has approached national security and immigration reform through the lens of her lived experience. “I think immigrants have given America so much, but it breaks my heart to see how politicized the conversation has become when we can have comprehensive immigration reform that secures our borders, but also provides pathways for people who are seeking legal status,” she said. “We can do it all – it’s not a zero-sum proposition as some people want you to believe.”
A mass shooting sparks a calling to serve
Shortly after the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting, which took the lives of 49 people, Republican John Mica – who had represented Florida’s 7th Congressional District since 1993 – accepted $5,000 from the National Rifle Association, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
That was a turning point for Murphy, who announced her campaign to run for his seat on June 26, just four months before the election. With no political background, Murphy channeled her family’s perseverance – and won.
“I was running against a 24-year incumbent, I never had any political experience, so everybody thought I was absolutely crazy,” she recalled. “I drew a lot on my background to make that decision, and on the night of my election, before the results came in, my husband gave me this ring, and he said, ‘Whatever the outcome of tonight is, I want you to have this ring to commemorate the fact that you had the courage to try.”









