United States Congressman August Pfluger (R-TX 11) held a well-attended Town Hall Meeting in Brownwood Monday afternoon. An estimated 75-80 people attended to hear the Congressman who represents Brown and more than 25 other counties in West Central Texas.
He covered a number of topics including vaccine mandates, the National Defense Authorization Act and the ongoing border crisis. He touched on the Sunday announcement by West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin that he intended to oppose President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better Act.
“It’s a major turn of events for us. It is such good news to taxpayers everywhere that we’re not going to go with this bill right now,” Pfluger told the crowd. He added that the bill is not dead. “It’s not dead until it’s voted on and killed and pushed aside. It will resurface eventually and they’re going to reshape it and rework it and it will come back up and we’ll keep fighting against it,” Pfluger said.
Concerning the covid vaccine mandate, Pfluger called it overreach at the grossest level. “I’m vaccinated, it was right for me. Nobody in this room told me to go do it. It was between my physician and myself. You’re not going to hear me stand up and tell you what to do, and that’s what I believe in,” Pfluger said, noting his office was involved locally with concerns of many local employees of industry who are opposed to the vaccine mandates.
Concerning border security, Pfluger said there has been a 1% increase in our nation’s population, 2.1 million people, just through them entering the country illegally. To bring the border problem closer to home, Pfluger pointed to the recent success by neighboring Comanche County Sheriff’s Department that recently arrested a 33 year-old illegal alien who is charged with human smuggling and possession of firearms by illegal alien. The arrest came after a two-year long investigation.
“Working with Federal agents, they found, not the head guy, but somebody in between, that was living in Comanche, Texas, distributing and selling illegal documents, green card visas, any other documents the federal government produces,” Pfluger said. The person is alleged to have trafficked more than 1,000 people. “This is what I tell both Republicans and Democrats in the House. You might live in Cincinnati, or you might live in Boston or Washington State, but you’re a border state now,” Pfluger noting the rise in Fentanyl crossing the border. He said he has introduced five pieces of legislation to fight border violations.
Congressman Pfluger then opened the room to questions which involved China trade, voter fraud and election integrity, among others.