Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD). (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD). (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

While House Oversight Committee Chair Jason Chaffetz has taken a large slice of the spotlight when it comes to Congressional foes of the District, there’s always Andy Harris.

The Maryland Republican has gone out of his way to prevent funding for D.C.’s marijuana decriminalization bill and ensure that D.C. could not have a tax-and-regulate system for the legalized drug. More recently, he’s pledged to use the appropriations process to prevent the implementation of the District’s Death with Dignity law.

People will have the chance to give Harris a piece of their minds when he hosts a town hall on March 31 in Easton, Md.—a township across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

In a statement, Harris said he chose that date because by then, Republicans will have a replacement ready for the Affordable Care Act. (A recent report from The Washington Post about the efforts to create a replacement makes March seem … optimistic.)

Many members of Congress have been greeted by packed, rowdy town halls, particularly over the question of repealing so-called Obamacare. Last week, Harris skipped a meeting about the future of the ACA, the Baltimore Sun reports,

If they show, it wouldn’t be the first time that District activists journey to the Eastern Shore for a Harris town hall. In January 2016, advocates went to one and Adam Eidinger, co-founder of DCMJ, asked the congressman why he would “overturn a law” that passed with such a wide majority.

Harris told Eidinger that D.C. shouldn’t be a state because it “makes irresponsible decisions like legalizing marijuana.” Before staffers whisked him away, he added that “recreational marijuana is dangerous, that’s the way it is.” (Weed is safer than other legal drugs like tobacco and alcohol, according to many researchers.)

Activists also organized sit-ins at Harris’s Capitol Hill office as part of “D.C. Councilmember Andy Harris Constituent Service Day,” made posters calling him “PoopyMonkeyBaby” for a protest outside his birthday party, and campaigned on behalf of his primary opponent, though Harris retained his seat.

As a reminder, D.C. residents do not have a representative on Capitol Hill with full voting rights.

We’ll see if Harris fares as well as Chaffetz, who faced a deluge of booing and jeering from his constituents in Utah during his town hall in early February. (D.C. was not mentioned.) Since then, Chaffetz has said, without a shred of proof, that the attendees were paid out-of-staters and that they “intended to bully and intimidate” him.

Eidinger says that he won’t be on the East Coast during the scheduled town hall but “I sure hope some other activists go. It’s definitely worth organizing for, and we’ll definitely let people know about it.”