Story highlights

People are trying to make their voices heard

Here's a look at how it's going

Washington CNN  — 

Across the country, people are flooding auditoriums, high school theaters and anywhere else they can to give their members of Congress an earful.

The reason: to weigh in on President Donald Trump’s agenda, and the potential of the new Congress to reshape government.

‘I want to thank you … but’

A Kentucky woman named Rose Mudd Perkins laced into Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday, raising vanishing coal jobs, health care reform and poverty among other things. She ended with a crack about McConnell’s treatment of Sen. Elizabeth Warren. She left, apparently, unsatisfied.

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Woman berates McConnell at luncheon
00:46 - Source: CNN

Perkins appeared on CNN the next day and continued to outline her frustration with politicians. She told CNN’s Brooke Baldwin about her personal struggles and the issues in her community and said she didn’t believe people’s voices were registering at the congressional level.

Immigrants and Muslim people concerned

One frequent topic of discussion at these town halls is the President’s words and actions with regard to immigrants and Muslim people. In at least one case, a Muslim immigrant raised his concerns with a senator.

“I’m a Muslim, who’s going to save me here?” asked Zalmay Niazy, who said he worked with the US armed forces in Afghanistan, at a town hall with Sen. Chuck Grassley.

Chuck Grassley town hall
Afghan man to Grassley: Who will save me?
02:13 - Source: CNN

Seen (and probably also heard)

People have come bearing signs. Some have a specific message or a warning, but many signs that dot the crowds just show a simple sign of agreement and disagreement so participants can indicate their feelings on different issues.

A woman holds up a sign during a U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) Town Hall meeting at the Hancock County Courthouse February 21, 2017 in Garner, Iowa.
A constituent holds up sign which reads "Agree" during a town hall meeting with Rep Tom Emmer (R-MN) on February 22, 2017 in Sartell, Minnesota.

Lock down the vote

Angry constituents regularly pledged to bring down their members of Congress in upcoming elections – even years down the line.

People listen as New Jersey Republican Congressman Leonard Lance speaks during a town hall meeting at Raritan Valley Community College on February 22, 2017 in Branchburg, New Jersey, where attendees demanded answers on health care.
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Constituent to senator: 2020, you're done!
00:48 - Source: WVUE

Then there’s New Jersey

New Jersey Rep. Leonard Lance, well, he had a time.

A woman walks a llama as people take part in a protest outside Raritan Valley Community College before a town hall  meeting on health care with Republican New Jersey Congressman Leonard Lance on February 22, 2017 in Branchburg, New Jersey.
People listen as New Jersey Republican Congressman Leonard Lance speaks during a town hall meeting at Raritan Valley Community College on February 22, 2017 in Branchburg, New Jersey, where attendees demanded answers on health care.

From women ‘in my grill’ to ‘having fun’

Rep. Dave Brat, a Virginia Republican, was recorded complaining about being confronted, saying at the time: “Since Obamacare and these issues have come up, the women are in my grill no matter where I go.”

He had long since come around by the time he had a town hall on Tuesday, when he said, “I like having debate, spirited conversation – if you can have a conversation.”

Astroturf claims

Asked on Tuesday about a tense event he held, Rep. Jason Chaffetz said people at his town hall “intended to bully and intimidate” him.

He had earlier in the month said the angry voices at his town hall were from paid protesters, but the protesters said they were real people, motivated to do this out of concern, not money.

Trump himself has repeatedly said protesters were paid and questionable.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer detailed this accusation in the briefing room.

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WH: Some manufactured anger at town halls
00:47 - Source: CNN

A different tack

Other Republicans have chosen not to accuse the people at their town halls of being paid or otherwise illegitimate.

Rep. Mark Sanford of South Carolina waded through questions inside and out of his town hall.

Rep. Scott Taylor told CNN at his Monday town hall: “That may be happening in other districts, but I don’t know of any paid protesters here, in this district,” Taylor said.

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Cotton: I don't care if you're a paid protester
00:50 - Source: KARK

And Sen. McConnell said the protests were “as American as apple pie.”

McConnell Protests
McConnell: Protests 'as American as apple pie'
01:07 - Source: WAVE

Cotton dodges

Cotton indicated his willingness to engage with his constituents and walked into a tough event on Wednesday.

People waited in long lines for Cotton at a liberal pocket of the red state.

And when he tried to dodge a determined questioner about Obamacare, the audience erupted.

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Crowd erupts as congressman avoids question
02:00 - Source: KARK

The senator closed out his event by taking a question from a 7-year-old. The boy, Toby, asked about Trump and the GOP prioritizing a border wall with Mexico over public programs, like PBS.

“He shouldn’t do all that stuff for just a wall,” Toby told Cotton.

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Young boy steals show at town hall
01:05 - Source: KARK

With or without you

For the members of Congress who have chosen to forgo town hall events so far, some constituents have opted to hold their own events, taking a page from Clint Eastwood’s book to debate an empty chair – or suit.

Waldo Issa

Sharp questions on health care

Tennessee Rep. Diane Black got a question about Obamacare from one teacher, and what the teacher had to say went viral.

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Teacher's town hall question goes viral
02:58 - Source: CNN

Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst faced cries of “shame on you” and “do your job” at the event and as she was filing into a car outside. She faced a number of tough interactions, including this moment on Obamacare.