Across the country, angry crowds have gathered at public forums on health care changes, booing and heckling members of the U.S. House of Representatives who voted for President Donald Trump's American Health Care Act (AHCA). On Monday, more than 200 people in Eden Prairie, in Minnesota's Third District, flipped the script, giving standing ovations to a congressman.
That congressman, however, doesn't represent that district, and most of the people in the crowd can't vote for him.
Rep. Keith Ellison, a Fifth District Democrat, spoke to a standing-room-only crowd about the proposed changes to health care. Rep. Erik Paulsen, a Republican who represents the Third, was absent, save for a sign that said, "Where is Erik?"
Paulsen saw the forum as a trap, no doubt. "Erik will continue to spend his time having productive and thoughtful discussions with constituents and stakeholders, not participating in political theater with the deputy chair of the DNC," said John-Paul Yates, campaign spokesperson.
To be sure, it was a bit of performance art by Ellison, who deftly took advantage of Paulsen's refusal to hold town meetings on health care. But it got rave reviews from a clearly partisan crowd, and many said they came away more informed.
The people who packed the community room of Immanuel Lutheran Church were the people who would be most affected if the GOP is successful in repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and replacing it with anything close to the AHCA. There were senior citizens, people on Medicaid and Medicare, people who had diabetes and heart conditions and lung problems. One woman from Chanhassen toted an oxygen tank.
Some people told stories of how the ACA had kept them from bankruptcy. Others complained that while their premiums were too costly, they were afraid it would only get worse under the proposed plan. Several people were in tears.
Attending the meeting was Dean Phillips, who recently announced he is running against Paulsen. Before the event, people swarmed around him. "Thank you for being here, and thank you for running," said one man. "My wife wants to take a picture."