May 27, 2022
In a stunning moment on Wednesday, May 25, former Representatiave Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) confronted Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) over gun control policy at a press conference at which officials were giving updates on the mass shooting at an Uvalde elementary school, reports the Huffington Post.
“You’re doing nothing. You’re all doing nothing,” O’Rourke told the officials assembled on the stage.
One of them repeatedly shouted back, “Sir, you are out of line!”
Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick (R) told O’Rourke he was “an embarrassment.”
An 18-year-old ran into Robb Elementary School in the small west Texas town on Tuesday, killing 19 children and two teachers with an AR-15 rifle. Seventeen more were injured, Abbott said earlier at the press conference. The man, who was killed by responding officers, had shot his grandmother in the face before driving over to the school. He posted his intentions to Facebook shortly before the rampage, Abbott said.
As Abbott finished his remarks and introduced Dan Patrick, O’Rourke approached the stage to interrupt. His initial remarks were drowned out by crosstalk from different attendees―some cheering him and many others jeering.
O’Rourke made a comment that clearly was directed at Abbott while law enforcement moved to escort him out.
Cody Ytuarte, a carpenter visiting family affected by the shooting, was standing near O’Rourke. He interjected: “This is propaganda, bro. Get out of here. You’re trash, man.”
As O’Rourke exited, some of his supporters chanted, “Let him speak!” One person asked, “How about the First Amendment?”
The Republican elected officials at the dais criticized O’Rourke with varying degrees of subtlety once he was out of the room.“There will be plenty of time to discuss and analyze what happened yesterday,” Patrick said.
Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan (R) concurred. “Mayor, I’m sorry you had to witness that outburst,” Phelan said to Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin. “Now is not the time to politicize pain and suffering.”
“What they need is uplifting from all of our fellow Texans and all of our fellow Americans,” the governor said. “And let me emphasize something that I know you all know, but the reality is as horrible as what happened, it could’ve been worse. The reason it was not worse is because law enforcement officials did what they do.”
Abbott called for better mental health care in the west Texas region. But when asked by a reporter whether he would reconsider accepting federal funds to expand Medicaid to that end, he said no.
“In times like this, I’ve seen it … in these other shootings, Sutherland Springs, El Paso, Odessa, Santa Fe, it’s God that brings a community together,” he added, referencing previous mass shootings in the state. “It’s God that heals a community.”
Following the outburst, Abbott criticized the relatively strict gun control policies of states with the nation’s largest cities, including California, Illinois, and New York.
“There are, quote, real gun laws in Chicago,” Abbott said, then claimed that such measures do not work. “Hate to say this, but there are more people who were shot every weekend in Chicago than there are in schools in Texas.”
Research contact: @HuffPost