LOS ANGELES — Democratic U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla on Thursday was forcefully removed from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's news conference in Los Angeles and handcuffed by officers as he tried to speak up about immigration raids that have led to protests in California and around the country.
Video shows a Secret Service agent on Noem's security detail grabbing the California senator by his jacket and shoving him from the room as he tried to speak up during the DHS secretary's event. Padilla interrupted the news conference after Noem delivered a particularly pointed line, saying federal authorities were not going away but planned to stay and increase operations to ''liberate'' the city from its ''socialist'' leadership.
''I'm Sen. Alex Padilla. I have questions for the secretary,'' he shouted in a halting voice.
Scuffling with officers outside the room, he can be heard bellowing, ''Hands off!'' He is later seen on his knees and then pushed to the ground and handcuffed in a hallway, with several officers atop him.
The shocking scene of a U.S. senator being aggressively removed from a Cabinet secretary's news conference prompted immediate outrage from his Democratic colleagues. Images and video of the scuffle ricocheted through the halls of Congress, where stunned Democrats demanded an immediate investigation and characterized the episode as another in a line of mounting threats to democracy by President Donald Trump's administration.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said what he saw ''sickened my stomach.''
''We need immediate answers to what the hell went on,'' the New York senator said from the Senate floor. ''It's despicable, it's disgusting, it's so un-American.''
In a statement, DHS said that Padilla ''chose disrespectful political theater'' and that Secret Service ''thought he was an attacker.'' The statement claimed erroneously that Padilla did not identify himself — he did, as he was being pushed from the room.