Houston Chronicle

California Rep. resigns, faults double standard

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON — California freshman congresswo­man Katie Hill bid a defiant farewell to the House on Thursday, suggesting a double standard forced her resignatio­n amid a messy divorce, “gutter” politics and nude photos made public.

In her last floor speech, Hill apologized to supporters, especially young girls and those who are different, for letting them down after toppling a Republican incumbent and rocketing toward the top of Democratic politics. Then she turned her fury on a system that she said allows President Donald Trump and other men accused of misconduct to remain in some of the highest offices in the country.

“This is bigger than me. I am leaving now because of a double standard,” Hill, who only days ago sat at the Democratic leadership table, said from the well of the mostly empty House. “I’m leaving, but we have men who have been credibly accused of intentiona­l acts of sexual violence and remain in boardrooms, on the Supreme Court, in this very body and, worst of all, in the Oval Office.”

There was no such complaint against the 32-yearold Hill. But she announced her resignatio­n Sunday night amid an ethics committee investigat­ion into whether she had engaged in an affair with a male congressio­nal staffer, which she denied and which would have broken House rules. Hill, who identifies as bisexual, acknowledg­ed having a consensual affair with a female aide on her campaign.

Meanwhile, a conservati­ve outlet published nude photos of Hill with another woman, a developmen­t she blamed on what she called an abusive husband and ruthless political operatives.

Hill added, “I’m leaving because of a misogynist­ic culture that gleefully consumed my naked pictures (and) capitalize­d on my sexuality.” She said the photos were taken and posted without her consent.

As Hill delivered her resignatio­n speech, some of her fellow freshmen signaled their support by sitting in the front row. Among them, her roommate on Capitol Hill, Rep. Lauren Underwood of Illinois, and Reps. Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and Joe Neguse of Colorado.

In contrast, there was a distinct lack of support from the House’s upper echelons for Hill to fight the scandal and stay in office. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who picked Hill for a post at the leadership table, issued a statement soon after the resignatio­n announceme­nt praising the congresswo­man but adding that the developmen­ts had made the prospect of Hill keeping her seat “untenable.”

On Thursday, just before the impeachmen­t vote, Pelosi called Hill an “outstandin­g young public servant” who is patriotic and respected. She said it’s “shameful” that Hill was humiliated. And she emphasized that Hill stepped down on her own.

Hill said the photos were taken and posted without her consent and enabled what she described as more abuse from her estranged husband she is divorcing. She said she’d been warned that political operatives had hundreds more nude pictures that they were planning to release “bit by bit until they broke me down to nothing while they used my faults and my past to distract from the things that matter most.”

Hill said she resigned in part because she didn’t want to be a distractio­n.

“There’s only one investigat­ion that deserves the attention of this country, and that’s the one we voted on today,” Hill said of the impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Trump, who can be heard on an “Access Hollywood” recording bragging about grabbing and kissing women without their consent, denies accusation­s of sexual misconduct from more than a dozen women. Two Supreme Court justices, Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh, have also denied accusation­s of sexual impropriet­y.

 ??  ?? Katie Hill said ‘gutter politics’ forced her to resign.
Katie Hill said ‘gutter politics’ forced her to resign.

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