Plainfield, Iowa -- Scott Walker was confronted by a family of an undocumented worker in his childhood hometown of Plainfield, Iowa during one of the final stops of his whirlwind presidential campaign launch tour on Sunday.
Jose Flores, an undocumented immigrant who calls Wisconsin home, was accompanied by his 13-year-old daughter Leslie and 7-year-old son Luis, both of whom were born in the United States and naturalized citizens.
"Why are you trying to break my family apart?" 13-year-old Leslie Flores asked, confronting Walker as he approached the family and addressed Leslie's father directly.
Shaking Flores' hand, Walker said he "completely sympathize[s] with the situation you're all in and others are in" but explained his position for not supporting deferred action.
"The fact is, we're a nation of laws," Walker said. "And unfortunately, the president last year, after saying 22 times before last year that he couldn't make the law himself, he said he wasn't the emperor, he was the president of the United States and he couldn't change the law, he decided to change the law even though the courts announced that you can't do that."
The Flores family lives in Waukesha, Wisconsin - Walker is their governor - but made the trip to Plainfield under the sponsorship of a Wisconsin immigrant rights advocacy group, Voices de la Frontera, which paid for their transportation, to confront the newly-minted Republican presidential candidate on the campaign trail.
"Do you want me to come home and come from school and my dad get reported?" Luis asked Walker, presumably meaning to say deported and not reported.
"No that's not what I'm talking about," Walker said, looking down at the boy and telling him that his nieces also go to school in Waukesha. "I appreciate kids like you and kids like them so that's not what my point is. My point is that in America, no one is above the law."
Flores said both he and his wife would both be eligible for deferred status under the executive actions President Obama took to grant certain undocumented immigrants temporary legal status to live in the United States without fear of deportation. Walker is among a bloc of governors who have signed onto a lawsuit against the Obama administration on the issue.
Flores asked Walker directly if he would consider dropping his support for the lawsuit. But Walker said he would not. "I support the lawsuit because I believe the president can't be above the law," he said.
From the crowd of reporters and onlookers clustered around Walker and the family, a woman shouted out to ask if Walker would deport families who would qualify for deferred action until the law is changed. Despite his opposition to deferred action, Walker said he would not deport those families.
After a several minutes long exchange, Walker excused himself from the confrontation to return to mingling with members of the Plainfield community who had come out with their lawn chairs to welcome him back to the small town, where his father served as the pastor in a Baptist church in Plainfield for seven years. From Plainfield, the family moved to Delavan, Wisconsin when Walker was 10.
The Flores family walked away from the interaction disappointed, the children in tears.
"He lied to us," Flores said. "He lied to us because he say he support immigration reform and he support DACA, OK, so if he support DACA, why he blocking it?"
Leslie explained that her little brother's greatest fear is to come home from school and find that one of their parents has been deported. And for her, Leslie said her passion stems from the experience of a close friend whose father was deported back to Mexico. "That really affected her and by her telling me her story of how her dad was deported, it was really heartbreaking for me just to see her not being with her dad made me really sad," she said.
"To how much he hates immigrant families is too much for me, that's why I came here to just tell him, 'Why is he separating our family?'" Leslie asked.