(CNN) โ€” President Donald Trump made it about four minutes into his first speech to Congress before a Democratic lawmaker, Rep. Al Green, began shouting that he should be impeached.

Green, a 77-year-old Texan who carries a cane and is known inside the US Capitol for his ardent anti-Trump bent, was removed from the House chamber.

Speaker Mike Johnson, who sat behind Trump, gave a verbal warning to Green, who earlier this year went to the floor of the same chamber to introduce articles of impeachment against Trump. The speaker ultimately broke into the presidentโ€™s speech and summoned Capitol officials to remove the 11-term member from his seat.

Democratic Rep. Al Green of Texas, center, is escorted out as President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, on March 4. Credit: Alex Brandon / AP via CNN Newsource

But itโ€™s not just Green who has sought ways to channel his partyโ€™s intense frustration at Trump during Tuesday nightโ€™s speech. Rep. Melanie Stansbury of New Mexico held a sign as Trump walked in that read โ€œThis is not normalโ€ โ€” which a GOP lawmaker ripped out of her hands. Stansbury later joined a group of other progressives.

โ€œThereโ€™s only so much bullshit a person can tolerate,โ€ Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove, a freshman Democrat, posted on X after she walked out of the chamber.

And in a highly unusual move, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries instructed his members to use restraint in their applause of Trump, according to two members familiar with the matter.

Itโ€™s a powerful moment for Jeffries and congressional Democrats as the party attempts to determine how to handle Trumpโ€™s role in the annual tradition โ€” with the usual pomp and circumstance in the Capitol โ€” at a time when he is routinely flouting congressional authority.

Jeffries and his leadership team had a highly scripted plan for how the partyโ€™s reaction would go. Party leaders urged rank-and-file members to show restraint and not mount a high-profile protest. Members were told no signs, no props and no attention-grabbing stunts that could be seized upon by the GOP.

But the actions by Democrats like Green, Stansbury and others defied leadershipโ€™s calls in a dramatic way. Two senior aides said they could not recall another example of a member being removed from a presidential address.

Some Democrats in attendance coordinated their outfits in protests โ€” pink for women, black for Black Caucus members โ€” while others decided not to go at all amid intense pressure to channel the anger from the partyโ€™s base. Even veteran Democrats, like Sens. Patty Murray and Chris Murphy, opted to boycott the address.

Rep. Don Beyer, a veteran Democrat from northern Virginia, said he decided not to attend the speech as Trumpโ€™s downsizing of the federal government has laid off hundreds of workers in his district.

โ€œI naturally respect traditions. I love my country. Iโ€™m one of those people who obeys his parents. But in this particular case, he has already destroyed the tradition,โ€ Beyer told CNN just ahead of the speech. โ€œI donโ€™t want to legitimize what he has done. For the people I represent, for them to see me in there, sitting there on my hands for a one or two hour speech would be incredibly frustrating.โ€

CNNโ€™s Lauren Fox contributed to this report.