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Lawmakers clash with constituents following more angry town halls

Lawmakers clash with constituents following more angry town halls
March 20, 2025

(CNN) โ€” Shouts of โ€œJanuary 6โ€ and โ€œtax the richโ€ flooded a town hall in Laramie, Wyoming, on Wednesday, where GOP Rep. Harriet Hageman faced a hostile crowd as she attempted to drown out the noise and answer questions โ€“ the latest such Washington lawmaker to be grilled in their home states.

Hageman said she liked the opportunity to do town halls โ€œbecause it lets me come here, give you an update on what Iโ€™m doing back in Washington, DC,โ€ prompting a swift response of โ€œnothingโ€ from one man.

โ€œIf you have so little respect for our process and for what we are in this country,โ€ Hageman started before being interrupted by some boos. โ€œThen I would ask you to leave.โ€

Voters have expressed their frustrations in several town halls across the country in recent days as they publicly vocalize their dissatisfaction with those in office. Constituents have criticized Republican members of Congress about President Donald Trumpโ€™s executive power and Elon Muskโ€™s Department of Government Efficiency efforts, while some Democratic members have faced complaints of being disorganized and not fighting Trump hard enough.

Hageman attempted to speak on DOGE and its efforts to reconfigure the federal government at one point, telling constituents at her town hall on Wednesday, โ€œHereโ€™s the only thing that DOGE has done, itโ€™s so bizarre to me how obsessed you are with federal government.โ€ She was immediately interrupted with jeers of disapproval and loud boos.

โ€œYou guys are going to have a heart attack if you donโ€™t calm down,โ€ Hageman told the crowd after repeatedly attempting to take control.

Democratic Rep. Sean Casten was interrupted several times by pro-Palestinian protesters during his own town hall Wednesday night in Downers Grove, Illinois. He warned that people โ€œare going to decide not to come to town halls anymore because itโ€™s not productive.โ€

At one point, a man jumped onto the stage with Casten, prompting the congressman to tell the crowd he would step off the stage and call the police.

โ€œSir, get off the stage! Get off the stage!โ€ Casten yelled at the man.

In another instance, a woman in the audience stood up and yelled at Casten about US support going to Israel.

โ€œMaโ€™am, can you please sit down? Maโ€™am, maโ€™am, maโ€™amโ€ฆ what is your point in disrupting this event? I recognize your face, you have disrupted many events,โ€ Casten responded.

Police asked the congressman to end the event and send everyone home after several heated exchanges.

A rise in heated confrontations from constituents

The town halls on Wednesday night illustrate growing signs of unease and dissatisfaction from constituents across the country.

Hageman faced another round of hostility at her town hall on Thursday, where in a tense exchange she was questioned by a voter about the Trump administrationโ€™s claims of fraud in government spending.

โ€œYou are a lawyer, where is this fraud?โ€ the voter, who identified herself as a retired military officer and Republican, asked Hageman, according to CSPAN video of the town hall. The voter added: โ€œWhat company, what organization, what personnel are we going after?โ€

Hageman pointed to spending by the US Agency for International Development โ€“ which the Trump administration and DOGE are attempting to dismantle โ€“ as the fraud. โ€œThis is what it is. This is the spending associated with the fraud. This is the fraud, spending is the fraud,โ€ Hageman asserted, to the dissatisfaction of the constituent and other attendees, who repeatedly interrupted her as she attempted to cite numbers.

GOP Rep. Rich McCormick of Georgia faced some tough criticism and occasional boos from constituents last month as he fielded questions about the Trump administrationโ€™s early actions.

At one point during his February town hall, McCormick was pointedly asked about the firings of hundreds of workers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is based in Atlanta: โ€œWhy is a supposedly conservative party taking such a radical and extremist and sloppy approach to this?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m in close contact with the CDC. They have about what, 13,000 employees, 13,000 employees at the CDC. In the last couple years, those probationary people, which is about 10% of their employee base, about 1,300 people, which youโ€™re referring to. A lot of the work they do is duplicitous with AI,โ€ McCormick said.

The mention of AI led to โ€œnoโ€™sโ€ and murmurs from the crowd, leading the Republican representative to say, โ€œI happen to be a doctor. I know a few things.โ€

GOP Rep. Cliff Bentz faced a similar reaction from his constituents during a town hall last month in La Grande, Oregon, where he also received questions on DOGE. One constituent asked, โ€œSince DOGE was created without the Congress, who is paying for it,โ€ leading to applause from the crowd.

โ€œThe DOGE committee, as I understand it, is being filtered into, if thatโ€™s the right word for (it) or put into another agency, but we are looking into that now to find out. I donโ€™t know the answer,โ€ he said before being interrupted by some boos and jeers of disapproval.

Some of the tough criticism and oftentimes angry remarks have led to police action. One man who identified himself as a veteran was escorted out of a town hall in Asheville, North Carolina after he shouted in protest following GOP Rep. Chuck Edwardsโ€™ comments about voting for the House budget resolution.

Edwards told CNN following the town hall, โ€œThere were so many people that took time to be there, that took time to put questions in the box that they wanted answered. I believe itโ€™s part of the democratic process, even though it might be uncomfortable from time to time. I think town halls are necessary.โ€

Other members of Congress showed more frustration about the matter. GOP Sen. Roger Marshall left his town hall earlier this month in Oakley, Kansas, after a larger-than-expected crowd pressed him about DOGE cuts including jobs held by veterans.

Fears of angry protesters have deterred some in office from going in front of crowds. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer postponed planned book tour events in several cities citing security concerns, after receiving heavy backlash from within his caucus and the Democratic base over his decision to vote to advance a Republican-led funding bill last week.

Local chapters of Indivisible, a progressive group created in 2016 after Trump first took the White House, had planned protests around events for the book tour.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CNNโ€™s Kaanita Iyer, Taylor Galgano and Martin Goillandeau contributed to this report.

The-CNN-Wire
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