Grassley was parted in Iowa, a fight at Marjorie Taylor Greene Town Hall

“Why don’t you do your job, Senator?”
It only stood in a room in a small town hall building in Fort Madison, Iowa, where constituents overflowed on the sidewalk for the opportunity to speak with the Republic of Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, pressing it on their concerns with Trump administrative deportation operations, government tariff policies, and government overreach.
At the City Hall of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in his district in Georgia, three people were expelled from the event a few minutes after starting.
Almost after the Congress member went on stage, a man was dragged by police officers. Shortly after that, other participants shouted from the audience. Greene ordered him to leave, and he came out, followed by an officer. A few moments later, a third man was handled and dragged by the police. When he tried to re -enter, the officer was annoying.

The police won a man at the Marjorie Taylor Greene City Hall at Cobb County, GA, on April 15, 2025.
Pool via abc news
Before the city hall, Greene warned, “If you plan to act, shout and protest, you will be discarded.”
Many hearing at Grasley in Iowa expressed concern over the rejection of Trump’s government to comply with court orders to facilitate the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from prison in El Salvador, on the grounds that Grassley and Congress have not adequate adequate checks and balances to Trump’s administration, allowing it to oppose court orders.
“You will bring that person back from El Salvador?” A member of the audience shouted.
“That is not the strength of the congress,” Grasley answered.
“El Salvador is an independent country … The president of the country is not subject to our US Supreme Court,” he added later.
You can hear the hard moans of a woman before a man shouts, “I’m upset!”
Grassley is among a handful of members of the Republican Congress to hold city hall during spring rest. GOP’s leadership has advised their members to avoid city hall directly after several members are roasted in the district from their origin earlier this year.

Senator Chuck Grassley attended the City Hall meeting at Lee County, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
At Grassey City Hall, other audience members asked, “We want to know what you, as people, congress, who should control this dictator, what will you do about these people who have been sentenced to life in a foreign country without legal proceedings?”
Before Grassley was able to answer, other audience members shouted about the lack of processes that must be carried out.

Someone spoke with Senator Chuck Grasley at the City Hall meeting at Lee County, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
“Trump did not obey the Supreme Court. He just ignored them!”
“You let it happen!”
During the neck with reporters after the City Hall was wrapped, Grasley again tried to argue that the government was not “responsible” because it brought Garcia back to the US if El Salvador refused to obey.
A reporter asked, “Do you have a concern that Donald Trump moves towards the constitutional crisis, or has reached one when he chose not to follow the court orders to make plans to return?”
“Well, this is not the President’s question following the court orders. This is a question about whether President El Salvador will do what our Supreme Court wants? And clearly our Supreme Court has no control over him, and he says he will not return it,” Grassey said. “So if there is a constitutional crisis, it is not caused by President Trump, it is caused by President El Salvador.”
“I hope our president will act in good faith, and I think our president will do that, to make a request for President El Salvador, but whether or not, but how President El Salvador responds to depending on President El Salvador,” he added.
During the city hall, members were known by Grasley that they believed there was more he could do to overcome their concerns about Trump and his actions since serving.
“Are you proud to choose Trump, what is he doing in the office? Are you proud of everything he did here?” One asks.
“There is no president I agree with 100 percent,” Grasley answered.

Someone spoke with Senator Chuck Grasley at the City Hall meeting at Lee County, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
“I didn’t say that – I said if you were proud of him,” answered the constituent. Grassley moved to another part of the room to answer different questions.
Grassley also tried to extinguish concerns from constituents about the impact that can be experienced by farmers in the state from the Trump tariff policy.
“My child is suffering from livestock, yes, and he works in regular jobs,” a woman told Grassley. “So I just want to know how the rate will affect someone like him?”
“It’s still too early to make an assessment if what I will say will happen,” Grasley answered, saying there might be benefits and weaknesses.
“It can also be negative, from the point of view that if people do not negotiate because there are more countries than 100 who have so far come to the table … When you place something negative like tariffs in a country, they seem to reply to agricultural problems.”
-ABC News’ Janice McDonald and Jason Volack contributed to this report.