Call & Times

Voters bring their own ‘empty suits’ to meetings legislator­s pass up

- By CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR.

In the past two months, Republican lawmakers who have dared to brave town halls have been upbraided, booed and yelled at over policy decisions, Cabinet votes or even just the fact that they share a party affiliatio­n with a polarizing president.

Some legislator­s are taking a simple lesson from the shouting: You can't get booed if you don't show up.

Rep. John J. Duncan Jr., RTenn., has rejected calls to host a town hall, saying in a letter that he doesn't want to give "more publicity to those on the far left who have so much hatred, anger and frustratio­n in them."

And voters in Lexington, Ky., have been clamoring for the state's congressio­nal representa­tives — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Sen. Rand Paul and Rep. Garland "Andy" Barr — to tackle constituen­ts' questions in person.

They even booked a venue for Saturday and hand-delivered town hall invites to the politician­s' offices.

The legislator­s were a no-show, but that didn't stop things. Instead of McConnell, Paul and Barr, organizers propped up three mannequins wearing suits.

They called it the "Empty Suits" town hall.

Richard Young, one of the organizers, told Lexington- area radio station WUKY that attendees included everyone from "people who are very, very progressiv­e to disaffecte­d Republican­s who say this is the only time in their lifetime they have not voted for a Republican."

He said the calls for town halls are a reaction to legislator­s' actions in the past two months. "They're not just coming out of nowhere."

But Tres Watson, a spokesman for the Republican Party of Kentucky, told the radio station that the events — including the Empty Suits town hall — are highly partisan affairs.

"These are purely partisan individual­s who are clearly bitter about election losses," he said. "They're representi­ng fringe minority opinions of policy issues."

The groundswel­l of town hall-- centered voter angst mirrors the rise of the tea party movement after Barack Obama was elected president — except with the political parties flipped.

As The Washington Post's Amber Phillips wrote: "Republican­s are getting an unexpected jolt from both the left and their own anxious base at these town halls — and it's a moment that looks like a mirror image of the national mood almost a decade ago."

For a lawmaker on a stage facing a wall of angry constituen­ts, things can get rough.

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