San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Conservati­ve wanted rioters to be shot

- By Patrick Svitek

In the days after George Floyd’s death in police custody in Minneapoli­s last month, as massive protests against police brutality spread across Texas and other states, conservati­ve power broker Steve Hotze of Houston called Gov. Greg Abbott’s chief of staff to pass along a message.

“I want you to give a message to the governor,” Hotze told Abbott’s chief of staff, Luis Saenz, in a voicemail. “I want to make sure that he has National Guard down here and they have the order to shoot to kill if any of these son-ofa-bitch people start rioting like they have in Dallas, start tearing down businesses — shoot to kill the son of a bitches. That’s the only way you restore order. Kill ’em. Thank you.”

The voicemail, which the Texas Tribune obtained Friday via a public informatio­n request, came on the weekend of June 6, several days after Abbott activated the Texas National Guard as some of the protests became violent.

It’s unclear whether Saenz responded, and Abbott’s office declined to comment on the voicemail.

A Hotze spokespers­on said he was not immediatel­y available for comment. But, several hours after the publicatio­n of this report, Hotze shared it on his personal Facebook page and another Facebook page affiliated with him.

“It’s not about race but has everything to do with the future of America — the freest and most progressiv­e country in the world,” Hotze wrote on the second Facebook page. “It’s about those who burn homes and businesses, including those owned by African Americans, and attack law enforcemen­t. Enough is enough.”

The voicemail brings into sharp relief the incendiary views of Hotze, a staunch critic of Abbott’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic who repeatedly has challenged the governor’s emergency orders in court.

The latest lawsuit came Friday, taking aim at Abbott’s mask mandate announced a day earlier.

In a Facebook post early Saturday, Hotze continued to take aim at Abbott, saying the governor’s “mask is starving his brain of oxygen.”

Hotze is one of most prolific culture warriors on the right in Texas. He is a fierce opponent of same-sex marriage and was a key figure in the 2015 defeat of Houston’s nondiscrim­ination ordinance — and then in the unsuccessf­ul push for the 2017 “bathroom bill” in the Texas Legislatur­e.

More recently, Hotze and his allies have been in the headlines for the lawsuits he has been filing amid the pandemic. Hotze sued Abbott over his stay-at-home order in April. In late May, Hotze asked the Texas Supreme Court to strike down the law that gives Abbott broad executive power to respond to disasters. And earlier this month, Hotze sued over the state’s contact tracing program.

The lawsuit over Abbott’s mask order was filed Friday in Travis County District Court.

The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

 ?? Ricardo B. Brazziell / Associated Press ?? Gov. Greg Abbott has been a frequent target of conservati­ve power broker Steve Hotze of Houston.
Ricardo B. Brazziell / Associated Press Gov. Greg Abbott has been a frequent target of conservati­ve power broker Steve Hotze of Houston.

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