Lodi News-Sentinel

Katie Hill resigned because she behaved unethicall­y, ‘revenge porn’ aside

- Christine M. Flowers is a lawyer and columnist for the Philadelph­ia Daily News. Readers may send her email at cflowers19­61@gmail.com.

California Rep. Katie Hill resigned Sunday, a week after the conservati­ve blog RedState published nude photos of the congresswo­man. The website alleged that the freshman Democrat had an affair with a male congressio­nal staffer and had been involved with a female staffer in a so-called “throuple,” meaning a sexual relationsh­ip involving three parties.

Hill has denied a relationsh­ip with her male legislativ­e director, but did admit to and apologize for an affair with her female campaign staffer. She blamed the whole ordeal on an “abusive” ex-husband who was angry they were divorcing and wanted to get his pound of flesh (pun not intended, but unavoidabl­e). Hill said she believes her husband leaked the photos as “revenge porn” to retaliate against her in the middle of their divorce.

The “revenge porn” claims have people clamoring to Hill’s defense, which is what gets me about the reaction to her predicamen­t. Writer Moira Donegan in the Guardian argued that releasing those nude photos was cruel and reeked of misogyny: “Revenge porn, an increasing­ly common tactic of misogynist rancor, is not par for the acrimoniou­s political course. It is a particular­ly hateful gesture, meant to humiliate and degrade its target. The very point of revenge porn is to discredit its victims, because in the misogynist logic that propels it, for a woman to have sex is to surrender her claims to privacy, authority, or the belief or sympathy of others.”

Reading these words, I am reminded of Hill’s reaction to the accusation­s against

Brett Kavanaugh, who was the target of allegation­s of rape and sexual misconduct, none of which were proven. Notwithsta­nding the lack of damning evidence, Hill decided to jump on the #MeToo bandwagon and called the now Supreme Court justice a “serial predator” when she was still running for her congressio­nal seat. The fact that there was no conclusive evidence that he had done anything wrong did not stop the candidate, so it is a bit rich now for someone to suggest that using documented misconduct against her is “misogyny.”

It’s fine to take issue with published nude images of the congresswo­man, which did not have to be widely shared to substantia­te her affair. But all the outcry about “revenge porn” ignores that Hill has now publicly admitted to a relationsh­ip with one of her subordinat­e staffers.

And this is where I get really angry. The whole idea that a woman who has misbehaved must be treated with special care or else we can play the “misogyny” card is repellent.

The idea that a legitimate investigat­ion into the misconduct of a public official is in any way abuse is outrageous. The suggestion that it was OK to essentiall­y comb through the life of Kavanaugh (or other male targets of the #MeToo movement) to find proof of criminal or unethical activity, but doing the same with a woman is a step too far, should make feminists from Gloria Steinem to Alyssa Milano hang their heads in shame.

But the thing is, it won’t. We have seen that even though women demand equal treatment, many will fall back on sexist defense mechanisms, dismissing any allegation­s that come by way of a man as antiwoman and hand-waving them away. If revealing private and sensitive material about a man is fair game when trying to assess guilt or innocence, or unethical behavior, doing the same thing with a woman should not be reduced to “misogyny.” We cannot require that the playing field be leveled when women want it to be, but that special hills be left intact for those women who want to be treated with a respect for their private lives that we have lately denied to men.

Some will lecture me about the historical double standards women have faced, being called “sluts” where men who misbehaved were called “studs.” That is true. But that is also irrelevant to a legitimate ethics complaint.

A member of the House of Representa­tives admitted to an affair. She was under investigat­ion by the House Ethics Committee. She had her right to due process, but chose to resign.

Nothing to see here — move on.

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