The Mercury News

Waters addresses death threats, canceled events

-

Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los Angeles, on Saturday publicly addressed the cancellati­on of her speaking engagement­s in Texas and Alabama after receiving several death threats, including one of lynching, for speaking out against Trump’s immigratio­n policies that have resulted in the separation of families at the border.

“We didn’t have all of our security in order and organized for those two trips, but we’ve got it together now,” she said on L.A. radio station KPFK during a town hall program hosted by Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable President Earl Ofari Hutchinson. “We’re going on with our schedule, and we’re going to keep talking about this president and his policies, and we’re going to keep fighting for these children and their parents and these families.”

Waters, a frequent critic of the Trump administra­tion, said she’s received a number of threats since her controvers­ial rallying cry earlier this month that members of the Trump administra­tion should be repeatedly confronted in their everyday lives; a message that she said has since been distorted.

“If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them and you tell them they are not welcome anymore, anywhere,” Waters had said at the time. “Mr. President, we will see you every day, every hour of the day, everywhere that we are. We’re going to let you know you cannot get away with this.”

President Trump quickly tried to use the protests to portray his administra­tion as a victim, falsely claiming on Twitter that Waters had advocated for his supporters to be harmed.

“Nowhere in this statement do you hear me talk about violence. I’m talking about a discussion,” Waters said Saturday on Hutchinson’s show. “This business about me heckling, harassing, talking about violence is all made up by the opposite side. It’s made up by right-wing conservati­ves, it’s made up by Republican­s in Congress, and they have scared the Democrats who are trying to somehow navigate on the question of civility.

“Protest is civility. It is the way by which the Constituti­on guarantees us our First Amendment rights. And when people protest, they are protesting because they have a voice. We are guaranteed freedom of speech.”

The recent public shaming of Trump administra­tion officials in Washington, D.C.-area restaurant­s has triggered an internal debate among Democrats over how far they should go in confrontin­g the president and his policies.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — AP ?? Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., speaks at the Families Belong Together march Saturday in Los Angeles.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — AP Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., speaks at the Families Belong Together march Saturday in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States