The Mercury News

Missouri Dem finds support at town hall

Senator greeted with applause in mostly Republican area

- By Jim Salter

HILLSBORO, Mo. — In a year when congressio­nal town hall meetings have often turned angry, Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill saw a much friendlier response Wednesday as she launched a series of town halls in predominan­tly Republican areas of Missouri.

About 150 people, the vast majority of them McCaskill supporters, turned out at a community college in the eastern Missouri town of Hillsboro, greeting her with a standing ovation and often interrupti­ng with applause. She has plans for seven subsequent meetings this week in potentiall­y hostile counties where Donald Trump won easily in the presidenti­al election, carrying Missouri with more than 65 percent of the vote.

The response was far different than what some of McCaskill’s Republican counterpar­ts have heard from angry town hall crowds opposed to Trump’s early agenda. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton and South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham have been yelled at, heckled and booed.

In Oklahoma, Rep. Markwayne Mullin canceled a Tuesday evening meeting at a high school in Tahlequah, citing unspecifie­d “safety concerns.”

Many members of both houses of Congress are opting to connect with constituen­ts by phone, social media and in controlled environmen­ts, rather than town halls.

McCaskill, 63, said hearing from constituen­ts in person is vital.

“I will tell you even the most contentiou­s town halls, I value them,” McCaskill said. “Seeing Missourian­s face-to-face and hearing their questions and concerns matters. It isn’t the same to do a telephone town hall. It isn’t the same doing a Facebook Live.”

The town hall did not include a microphone for attendees. Those wanting to ask questions submitted them prior to the event, and McCaskill read them. Near the end, she joked she was disappoint­ed she hadn’t received any questions “from somebody who will never vote for me.”

McCaskill is among 10 Senate Democrats running in 2018 in states won by Trump. Republican Rep. Ann Wagner of suburban St. Louis is a likely contender for her seat, and Missouri’s newly elected 37year-old Republican attorney general, Josh Hawley, is being urged to run by supporters who include longtime Republican Sen. John Danforth and prominent donor David Humphreys.

Democrats face a tough battle in the Senate. Republican­s already have a 52-48 majority and Democrats are defending 25 seats to the GOP’s eight.

Republican­s are hoping to win a filibuster-proof 60vote majority.

McCaskill, first elected in 2006, acknowledg­ed she is likely to be the underdog in her re-election bid, but said that’s nothing new. A year before her 2012 election, she said, “I was a dead woman walking in terms of my election chances.”

That was before her Republican opponent, Todd Akin, doomed his chances by telling a TV interviewe­r that women’s bodies have ways of preventing pregnancy in cases of “legitimate rape.”

McCaskill drew criticism from Republican­s last week when she voted against confirmati­on of Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch. The Kansas City Star had released audio of her telling donors the decision was difficult because Gorsuch “was one of the better ones” among Trump’s possible picks to fill the seat vacated by the death of Antonin Scalia in February 2016.

She told the Hillsboro crowd that the politicall­y smart thing to do in largely conservati­ve Missouri would have been to support Gorsuch. But she said she found portions of his record troubling.

McCaskill’s Missouri counterpar­t, Republican Sen. Roy Blunt, has not hosted a town hall since the election. It wasn’t clear if he planned to do so. A spokesman did not return a phone message seeking comment.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. spoke at a town hall meeting Wednesday in Hillsboro, Missouri. McCaskill, who is up for re-election in 2018, has seven more meetings planned.
JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. spoke at a town hall meeting Wednesday in Hillsboro, Missouri. McCaskill, who is up for re-election in 2018, has seven more meetings planned.

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