Warned Off Meeting Voters, Republicans Who Do Confront Anger and Unease

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In a deeply conservative district and a more liberal one, two Republicans found uncertainty and anxiety about the Trump administration’s agenda and their support of it.

Representative Harriet Hageman, wearing a blue dress, stands as she addresses a mostly seated crowd.
Elon Musk and far-reaching cuts led by his Department of Government Efficiency drew the sharpest reactions at a town hall in Evanston, Wyo., held by Representative Harriet M. Hageman on Friday.Credit...Kim Raff for The New York Times

Robert JimisonKatie Glueck

By Robert Jimison and Katie Glueck

Robert Jimison reported from Afton, Wyo., and Evanston, Wyo. Katie Glueck reported from Asheville, N.C.

March 17, 2025, 3:37 p.m. ET

The overflow crowd that gathered to see Representative Harriet M. Hageman at a civic center in Afton, Wyo., on Thursday evening included many of her longtime allies, but the pointed questions started even before she made it to the podium to begin speaking.

“Nobody is touching Social Security,” Ms. Hageman, a second-term Republican, told a retired woman sitting in the front row who blurted out her concerns about potential cuts to the program by the Trump administration.

Things got spicier from there.

The next evening, at another town hall about 100 miles south in Evanston, Scott Flint, a retired miner, confronted Ms. Hageman about how the Trump administration’s cuts had reached his pocket of the state, shuttering a local Mine Safety and Health Administration office that provides crucial support in the area.

President Trump and Elon Musk, he warned, would soon face the same problems that corporate employers do after mass layoffs.

“They come in with the chain saw and then they find out, ‘Oh, there was some value to what they were doing,’” Mr. Flint, 67, said later in an interview. “But those guys are gone. They’ve gone down the road. You’re not going to get them back.”

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Scott Flint, a retired miner who attended Ms. Hageman’s town hall in Evanston, said he was troubled by the recent closing of a local Mine Safety and Health Administration office.Credit...Kim Raff for The New York Times

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