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Dear Rep. Comer – More chicken suits are coming

As long as you won’t show up to talk with your constituents, we’ll keep showing up at your office

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Chuck Paisley of LiUNA! Local 1214 and UAW retiree Jerry Sykes in the chicken suit. Sykes is acting as Rep. Jamie Comer (photo by Berry Craig)

First District Congressman James Comer is all-MAGA all the time.

So the Republican opted for a Trumpian response when 82-year-old United Auto Workers retiree Jerry Sykes and four other protestors showed up in chicken suits outside his Paducah field office last Thursday.

The quintet and other protestors hoped to convince the congressman to hold a town hall.

“He’s a chicken if he won’t,” said Sykes from inside his bright yellow nylon outfit with an oversize head, red beak, and matching bow tie.

Comer was so irate that he had his staff fire off a statement that said their boss “does not plan on holding therapy sessions for left-wing activists suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome.” In other words, he’s chicken to face the homefolks.

Comer is hardly alone among GOP lawmakers who aren’t keen on town halls these days. A slew of voters are angry at President Donald Trump and Co-president Elon Musk for taking a meat axe to the federal government and the civil service.

Protests have even spread to the most crimson of Republican Red states, including Kentucky, where Trump won 64.5 percent of the vote last year. Comer collected nearly 75 percent of First District ballots.

No matter, Sykes said – “Comer can’t seem to find his way back to western Kentucky.”

Four Rivers Indivisible sponsored hour-long protests on most Thursdays in February and March. Last Thursday was a sort of grand finale, hence the chicken costumes. At one time or another as many as three dozen people kept the chickens company on the sidewalk, holding signs and waving at passersby on the city’s busy South Third Street. Several motorists honked their horns and flashed thumbs up to show their support.

After WPSD-TV, Paducah’s NBC affiliate, covered the protest, some of the national media picked up the story.

Comer might believe his schoolyard bully response burnished his tough-guy creds and scared off the protestors for good. But they’ll be back in town on April 5 for what Four Rivers hopes will be a larger rally that will be part of a nationwide Indivisible program called “Hands Off! National Day of Action.” Chicken suits are expected to be reprised.

The rally is set for 1 to 3 p.m. at Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 184, 1127 Broadway. “Much gratitude to Derrick Sanderson and the Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 184,” said Leslie McColgin, co-leader of Four Rivers Indivisible. Click here to sign up.

“Donald Trump and Elon Musk think this country belongs to them,” says the Hands Off 2025 website. “They’re taking everything they can get their hands on, and daring the world to stop them. On Saturday, April 5th, we’re taking to the streets nationwide to fight back with a clear message: Hands off!”

Anyway, when Sykes heard chicken costumes will be on offer again, he agreed to suit up anew. An Indivisible member, he lives in Marshall County, which is also close to Paducah.

Sykes said he’d walked many a picket line and joined multiple peaceful protests. But last week was the first time he’d donned a chicken costume.

“I didn’t feel I needed to before,” explained Sykes, who worked for Chrysler (now Stellantis) in Warren, Mich. “If a chicken suit is what I need to wear, I’ll do it again in a heartbeat.”

Sykes chuckled when he heard Comer’s snarky slam. “He just a water boy for President Trump,” the octogenarian said.

Sykes said western Kentuckians — Republicans, Democrats, and independents — are united in demanding “to know where Congressman Comer stands on Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, abolishing the Education Department and all those terrible things Trump is doing to us. The people are fed up with it.”

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Berry Craig

Berry Craig is a professor emeritus of history at West KY Community College, and an author of seven books and co-author of two more. (Read the rest on the Contributors page.)

Arlington, KY

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