Wisconsin Public Radio

US Rep. Bryan Steil Faces Hostile Audience During Town Hall

Steil was met with boos and jeers during his first town hall since passage of President Trump's sweeping budget and immigration law.

By , Wisconsin Public Radio - Aug 1st, 2025 10:19 am
Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil takes questions from constituents during a contentious town hall, Thursday, at the Elk Horn High School auditorium. Throughout the evening the congressman was drowned out by boos and jeers from audience members in Steil’s first in-person town hall since the passage of President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill act.” Rich Kremer/WPR

Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil takes questions from constituents during a contentious town hall, Thursday, at the Elk Horn High School auditorium. Throughout the evening the congressman was drowned out by boos and jeers from audience members in Steil’s first in-person town hall since the passage of President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill act.” Rich Kremer/WPR

Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil was met by a hostile crowd attempting to shout him down Thursday evening during his first town hall gathering since the passage of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill Act.”

Some supporters left early calling the spectacle “disgusting,” while one Democratic activist said the Janesville Republican “got what he deserved” for being a rubber stamp for Trump and the GOP.

The Elkhorn High School auditorium was filled with around 200 people, some of whom carried signs with slogans like “Resist,” “God is King no Others” and “Hands off SSI and Medicare.” When he entered the stage, Steil was met a by a roar of boos mixed with some cheers from a smaller group of his supporters.

The town hall was raucous as the audience repeatedly overpowered Steil’s microphone. He paused often while urging the crowd to stay civil and allow him to answer a series of questions out of respect to those who asked them.

Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil addresses a mostly hostile audience on Thursday, July 31, 2025 in Elkhorn, Wis. during his first in-person town hall forum since the passage of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill Act.” During the event, attendees booed and jeered when he voiced support for Trump’s policies. Rich Kremer/WPR

Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil addresses a mostly hostile audience on Thursday, July 31, 2025 in Elkhorn, Wis. during his first in-person town hall forum since the passage of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill Act.” During the event, attendees booed and jeered when he voiced support for Trump’s policies. Rich Kremer/WPR

The questions touched on a wide range of issues from federal funding for cancer research, Trump’s broad-ranging tariffs being enacted without congressional approval and the immigration arrests by masked ICE agents “disappearing” people.

One attendee questioned the morality of deportation raids during Trump’s second term.

“What I see happening to our immigrant population embarrasses me, horrifies me, and you have not raised your voice to complain about it,” she told Steil. “I see no leadership. I see following Trump 100 percent of the time.”

In response, Steil lauded Trump’s executive orders and deportations.

“What I see as moral hazard was created by (former President Joe) Biden by allowing the U.S.-Mexico border to remain unsecure,” Steil said, as he was drowned out by a roar of boos that lasted roughly 10 seconds.

“I think we need to secure the U.S.-Mexico border,” Steil continued after the crowd quieted. “You may not. It’s fine that we disagree.”

A crowd of people gathered in Elkhorn, Wis. to hear from Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil on Thursday, July 31, 2025. Steil was repeatedly booed at the forum, his first since President Donald Trump signed his sweeping budget and immigration law. Rich Kremer/WPR

A crowd of people gathered in Elkhorn, Wis. to hear from Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil on Thursday, July 31, 2025. Steil was repeatedly booed at the forum, his first since President Donald Trump signed his sweeping budget and immigration law. Rich Kremer/WPR

On tariffs, a man from Elkhorn said he was always under the impression that Congress must be involved, which was met with loud cheers. He then asked “what dire economic circumstances” put Trump in a position to issue them without congressional approval.

Steil didn’t get into specifics about the role of Congress, but said the overall goal of the Trump administration is “to make sure that other countries are treating the United States fairly.” He called China an “egregious abuser” of U.S. trade policies across multiple administrations. When asked again why the president is going it alone, Steil referenced an ongoing legal battle over whether Trump needs Congress’ blessing.

 

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The shouting, the boos and overall chaos was too much for Walworth County resident Carol Stanczak who walked out of the auditorium about halfway through the question-and-answer session. She told WPR she came to have questions answered, but Steil was “road blocked by people screaming and hollering.”

Kevin Roblee of Lake Geneva, a supporter of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, looks on from the back of the Elkhorn High School auditorium during a raucous town hall Thursday, July 31, 2025. Rich Kremer/WPR

Kevin Roblee of Lake Geneva, a supporter of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, looks on from the back of the Elkhorn High School auditorium during a raucous town hall Thursday, July 31, 2025. Rich Kremer/WPR

“You know, I don’t know if these people are paid to come in here and be jerks,” Stanczak said. “This is not the American way. Let the man speak!”

She said Steil is a good leader who is committed to and concerned about his constituents. She said the audience’s behavior only strengthened her support.

“I’ll fight harder,” Stanczak said.

Another Steil supporter, Kevin Roblee of Lake Geneva, stood at the back of the auditorium and occasionally shouted at the crowd to let Steil answer questions. He said Walworth County is “a conservative county, and this is the first time I’ve ever seen this kind of rhetoric coming out of the audience.” He said the dialogue “seems to be against Trump, rather than what Bryan Steil is doing in Congress, which is much more important and relevant.”

“This has nothing to do with Bryan Steil or his efforts in Congress, and that’s why I’m upset,” Roblee said.

Retired AFSCME union staff member and current organizer Mary Burpee of Elkhorn saw the town hall differently. She said she wasn’t surprised to see the anger leveled at Steil because constituents like her have been “demanding” he hold an in-person town hall “for many months, almost a year now.”

“Normally, I would be of the persuasion that there should be some decorum that, you know, let your representative speak,” Burpee said. “But I think he deserved this today, and I say that because he’s given the middle finger to his constituents for so long. And I think the passage of that horrible, big, beautiful bull**** bill has got people so angry, and it’s already passed. So people are frustrated.”

Days before Thursday’s town hall, Burpee was part of a mock funeral procession that included a cardboard coffin left at the front door of Steil’s home in Janesville, which made national news Wednesday evening. She said the coffin represented the “death of democracy,” and was in no way meant as a threat against Steil or his family.

After a raucous town hall hosted by Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, Democratic Party of Wisconsin 1st Congressional District delegation Chair Susan Chandler criticized the congressman and said he didn’t give straight answers to constituents opposed to Steil’s votes in support of President Donald Trump. Rich Kremer/WPR

After a raucous town hall hosted by Republican U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, Democratic Party of Wisconsin 1st Congressional District delegation Chair Susan Chandler criticized the congressman and said he didn’t give straight answers to constituents opposed to Steil’s votes in support of President Donald Trump. Rich Kremer/WPR

Susan Chandler, who chairs the Democratic Party of Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District delegation, also stood by Steil’s opponents who shouted during the town hall and said “people had a right to express their emotions.”

“I don’t feel he answered a single question that was presented to him,” Chandler said. “He was slick and polished, and it’s time for him to go.”

After the town hall concluded and the audience filed to their vehicles, a homemade “No Kings” sign was left hanging on the entrance to the Elkhorn High School auditorium.

Steil represents one of just two competitive congressional districts in Wisconsin, though he has won previous races comfortably and currently has a large fundraising edge in the early stages of this campaign cycle.

US Rep. Bryan Steil met by hostile audience during raucous town hall was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.

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Comments

  1. Duane says:

    So in addition to all the points brought up here there was no mention of Israeli Palestinian “conflict” in this piece, and an MJS article just contained the blurb,

    ” When asked what he would do about the people starving in Gaza, Steil told the crowd the “easy answer to address this crisis is for Hamas to surrender and release the hostages.”

    I don’t know if there was a more meaningful discussion than that but I guess in Steil’s mind it all began on October 7th 2023 with the Hamas attack and all Palestinians are terrorists and are just getting what they deserve. Even those little kids being gunned down by the IDF as they try to get some food. What else could Steil mean other than Palestinians are terrorists just getting what they deserve?

    These politicians are so flippant and willing to back the complete moral depravity of both Trump and the right wing government of Israel. (One definition I found for “Moral depravity” refers to a complete lack of integrity, resulting in behaviors that are considered morally wrong or evil. Spot on for both Trump and Netanyahu).

    I would have a hard time feeling good about myself in supporting, among many other things, Trump and Netanyahu. But I guess your typical American politician, like Steil, is a different breed altogether.

  2. lobk says:

    He’s a rubber stamp for Dear Leader Trump’s bidding and a supporter of the cover-up of the Epstein pedophilia/child-trafficking investigation files release that would certainly expose our rich & infamous.

    The seldom heard from (unless an election is looming) Steil is in a now-vulnerable district that could be flipped D with the right candidate, support, and voter turnout.

  3. TosaGramps1315 says:

    It seems that a significant portion of the town hall was spent questioning BS (perfect initials, BTW) about what he and the rest of Congress have done or are planning to do to at least reestablish the controls that the House historically has had.
    From what I have seen and heard of his responses to those questions, it appears there is no plan to reassert their control over the outrageous policy enactments of Frump & Friends, thereby making many wonder what the role of the House is now, other than to kowtow to Frump at every turn of his twisted mind.

  4. mkwagner says:

    What has Steil done in Congress except take his $174,000 salary. He has done little for the 1st Congressional District. The only time I heard from him was beg for money for his Congressional race. He is a stuff shirt that has done nothing to learn about the people of the 1st district. It’s time for Steil to go.

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