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Cotton Faces Angry Constituents At Town Hall

Sen. Tom Cotton faced an angry reception at a town hall forum in the Northwest Arkansas Ozarks. The crowd of 2,200 people filled the Springdale High School auditorium to capacity Wednesday to pepper the conservative Arkansas Republican with questions about everything from immigration and health care reform to President Donald Trump's ties to Russia.

[Hear a full report from content partner KUAF in Fayetteville]

Placards dotted the crowd bearing such slogans as "Refugees Welcome," "Stop Trump Or Lose our Votes" and "We Need Those Latinos." Two supportive placards were visible, a Trump-Pence campaign sign and a "Women for Cotton" placard.

The crowd chanted, "This is what democracy looks like" outside the Pat Walker Performing Arts Center before being admitted and seated. Springdale police on hand to calm several heated exchanges between those waiting in line.

When Cotton opened the event by asking the crowd to join him in the Pledge of Allegiance, the crowd complied, emphasizing the last words "for all." The event, which saw Cotton take questions from booing members of the audience, was sought by a Northwest Arkansas group called Ozark Indivisible - which picketed Cottons' Springdale office last month.

Cotton addressed a range of questions from constituents who expressed anger at President Donald Trump and Congressional Republican policies on refugees, immigrants, healthcare and a range of other issues. One constituent, Kati McFarland of Fayetteville, who said she suffered from a rare medical condition, questioned the Republican Senator on the plans for continuing coverage of people who’ve benefited from the Affordable Care Act.

Sen. Cotton waits for crowd noise to die down so he can answer a question.
Sen. Cotton waits for crowd noise to die down so he can answer a question.

"Will you commit to replacements in the same way that you have committed to repeal?" she asked.

"Everyone in this room has been hurt or helped by Obamacare," Cotton said.

The crowd booed, many shouting they had only been helped by it.

The event came a day after Arkansas Third District Congressman Steve Womack met a similar, but less sizable,  angry crowd at a town hall in West Fork.

Video of the entire town hall meeting:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyFa4FIcDo0

Copyright 2017 KUAR

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Chris Hickey was born and raised in Houston, Texas, spending his teenage years in Camden, Ohio. He graduated from Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas, majoring in English. He got his start in public radio working as a board operator at WMUB in Oxford, Ohio during his summer and winter breaks from school. Since graduating, he has made Little Rock home. He joined KUAR in September 2011 as a production intern and has since enjoyed producing, anchoring and reporting for the station. He is the composer of KUAR's Week-In-Review Podcast theme music and the associate producer of Arts & Letters.
As Content Development Director, Karen Tricot Steward oversees the creation of news and cultural programming and helps set standards and best practices. She manages content on our website and social media. Karen also coordinates the internship program and collaborates with journalism professors at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock to teach students, helping fulfill public radio’s goal of serving the community by being a place of learning.
Zuzanna Sitek
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