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“Suck it up, buttercup” bill sponsor says reaction is ‘surreal’

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November 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

A Republican member of the Iowa House is making appearances on state, national and even international talk shows to discuss his “suck it up, buttercup” bill. Representative Bobby Kaufmann, of Wilton, wants to cut taxpayer funding for Iowa, Iowa State or U-N-I if the universities spend money on grief counseling for students upset about the presidential electi “In all fairness, there’s a huge percentage of college students that are normal, responsible adults,” Kaufmann says, “but there are too many that are being coddled and in my opinion they’re not being prepared for the real world because you don’t get to go to a cry room when life hands you lemons.”

Officials with the three state universities say they are not spending money on “cry rooms” or other services specifically for students upset about the election. Kaufmann’s proposed bill would also increase penalties for protesters who block public roads. “It was in my district, just outside of it, with my constituents where they protested and shut down Interstate 80. I had a constituent from Bennett, Iowa, who has a blood disorder who if the protest would have lasted at a time when she needed her medication, she would have died,” Kaufmann says.

Kaufmann, the son of Iowa G-O-P chairman Jeff Kaufmann, says he was annoyed to see colleges in OTHER states offering counseling sessions for college students upset about Donald Trump’s election. Kaufmann has taken his beef to the airwaves, with appearances on national outlets like Fox News and local radio stations in Iowa. “It’s a little surreal that I’m getting literally dozens upon dozens of media requests, thousands of emails across the country,” Kaufmann says. “I never fathomed it would become what it’s become.”

Kaufmann made his comments on K-S-C-J Radio in Sioux City, Thursday. He says the reaction he’s gotten online is positive by a 10-to-one ratio. “A lot of the negatives I get are from people that the message is directed at and they come at me with these profanity-laced, threat-laced emails and I’ve come up with a term for them,” Kaufmann says. “They’re keyboard cowboys.”

The Iowa Democratic Party issued a statement Thursday, saying as a “young Republican leader,” Kaufmann had an opportunity after the election to “bring the people of Iowa together,” but instead chose “callous comments that threaten the free speech” rights of students. On Wednesday, the top Republican in the legislature was asked if now “is the time to tell the buttercups to suck it up.”

And this the answer House Speaker Linda Upmeyer gave: “We do have one member doing that…There’s room for disagreement. There’s always room for disagreement, but this is a time to focus on opportunities that present themselves and giving people chances. I mean, we had an election and we have the results of the election and we need to move forward. I think focusing on forward is a really positive thing.”

(Radio Iowa)