Grassley is hammered in Iowa, scratched at the town hall of Marjorie Taylor Greene

“Why don’t you do your job, senator?”
He was standing in a small building in the Town Hall in Fort Madison, Iowa, where the voters overwhelmed on the sidewalk to have a chance to speak with the republican senator of Iowa, Chuck Grassley, the pressing about their concerns concerning the deportation operation of the Trump administration, the pricing policy of the administration and the redesign of the government.
At the town hall of the representative Marjorie Taylor Greene in her Georgia district, three people were withdrawn from the event a few minutes after starting.
Almost immediately after the deputy went on stage, a man was dragged by police officers. Shortly after, another participant shouted from the public. Greene ordered him to leave and he came out, dragged by an officer. A few moments later, a third man was approached and dragged by the police. When he tried to come back, the police packed him.

Police catch a man from the event of the representative Marjorie Taylor Greene in Cobb County, Georgia, April 15, 2025.
Pool via ABC News
Before her town hall, Greene warned: “If you plan to act, shout and protest, you will be thrown away.”
Many members of Grassley in Iowa have expressed concerns about the refusal of the Trump administration to comply with the judicial orders to facilitate the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia of a Salvador prison, arguing Grassley and the Congress did not provide checks and balances on the Trump administration, allowing him to challenge orders.
“Are you going to bring back this type of Salvador?” A public member cried.
“It is not a power of the congress,” replied Grassley.
“El Salvador is an independent country … The president of this country is not subject to our Supreme Court of the United States,” he added later.
You could hear a great groan of a woman before a man shouted: “I am upset!”
Grassley is among a handful of republican members of the Congress to hold the town halls during its spring recreation. GOP leadership advised its members to avoid town halls in person after several members were toasted in their original districts this year.

Senator Chuck Grassley attended a town hall meeting in the county of Lee, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
At the Town Hall of Grassley, another public member asked: “We would like to know what you, as a people, the Congress, who is supposed to brake this dictator, what are you going to make these people who were sentenced to life imprisonment in a foreign country without regular procedure?
Before Grassley could answer, other public members shouted regarding the lack of regular procedure.

A person speaks to Senator Chuck Grassley at a meeting of the town hall in the county of Lee, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
“Trump does not obey the Supreme Court. He simply ignores them!”
“You allow it to happen!”
During a group with journalists after the end of the town hall, Grassley again tried to argue that the administration is not “responsible” for bringing Garcia back to the United States if El Salvador refuses to comply.
A journalist asked, “Do you have concerns that Donald Trump approaches a constitutional crisis, or has already reached one when he chooses not to follow the orders of the court to make plans for his return?”
“Well, this is not a question of the president following the order of the court. It is a question of ensuring that the president of El Salvador will do what our Supreme Court wants to do? And obviously, our Supreme Court has no control over him, and he says that he is not going to return it,” said Grassley. “So, if there is a constitutional crisis, it is not caused by President Trump, it is caused by the president of Salvador.”
“I would expect our president to act in good faith, and I think that our president will do, to make these requests from the president of Salvador, but if the president of El Salvador responds would be to this president of El Salvador,” he added.
During the town hall, the members informed Grassley that they thought there was more than he could do to respond to their concerns about Trump and his actions since his entry into office.
“Are you proud to vote for Trump, what he does in office?” Are you proud of everything he does here? ” One asked.
“There is no president, I agree with 100%,” replied Grassley.

A person speaks to Senator Chuck Grassley at a meeting of the town hall in the county of Lee, Iowa, April 15, 2025.
ABC News
“I did not say that – I said that you are proud that it is,” replied the constituent. Grassley moved to another part of the room to answer a different question.
Grassley has also tried to repress the concerns of voters concerning the impact that state farmers could feel Trump’s pricing policies.
“My son has cattle, yes, and he works on regular job,” a woman told Grassley. “And so I just wonder how the prices will affect someone like him?”
“It is too early to make a judgment if what I’m going to say will happen,” said Grassley, saying there could be advantages and disadvantages.
“It could also be negative, from the point of view that if people do not negotiate because there are many more countries than the 100 that has so far come to the table … When you put something negative like a price on a country, they seem to retaliate against agricultural issues.”
-Abc News’ Janice McDonald and Jason Volack contributed to this report.