Orlando Sentinel

Rep. Katie Hill’s exit prompts debate

- By Maryclaire Dale

Her resignatio­n has many wondering if women are held to a different standard for private sexual behavior.

The resignatio­n of a female Democratic congresswo­man over a consensual sexual relationsh­ip with a campaign aide has sparked questions about whether women are held to higher standards in public life.

At the center of the controvers­y is Katie Hill, a firstterm lawmaker from California and a rising Democratic Party star. In a video released Monday, Hill said she was stepping down because she was “fearful of what might come next” following the online publicatio­n of explicit pictures that outed her relationsh­ip with a female staffer.

Sex scandals are nothing new in national politics and have mostly centered on men, some of whom have weathered the controvers­y and gone on to have successful careers. One of Hill’s congressio­nal colleagues, Republican Rep. Duncan Hunter of California, is running for reelection despite being charged with using campaign funds to finance romantic flings with lobbyists and congressio­nal aides.

That’s prompted some to question why Democrats supported Hill’s resignatio­n.

“Some of her behavior, if a man did it, we would say it was wrong and inappropri­ate. But she is being held to a different standard,” said Kelly Dittmar, a scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

Hill acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip with the campaign aide after private photos of her with the woman were posted online, first by a conservati­ve website. Hill said the relationsh­ip was consensual and blamed her estranged husband for revealing the informatio­n. Hill and her husband are in the midst of an acrimoniou­s divorce.

Hill has denied another allegation that she was having an affair with a male congressio­nal adviser, a relationsh­ip that would have run afoul of House rules put in place last year that ban any relationsh­ip between lawmakers and staff. Those rules were enacted following a string of misconduct allegation­s involving male colleagues.

The House opened an ethics investigat­ion into the allegation­s about Hill, but the California Democrat announced her resignatio­n within days of the committee launching the probe.

House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who had tapped Hill for a leadership post after she unseated a Republican in the suburban Los Angeles swing district, called her continued service “untenable.”

Hill’s defenders say she is the victim in this situation, given the publicatio­n of private photos that exposed her relationsh­ip.

“She’s under attack by a vengeful ex and an opportunis­tic media, and a society that is all too eager for a woman to be taken down, and quote-unquote “#MeToo-ed,” said New York lawyer Carrie Goldberg, who often represents victims of such attacks. “This is not a #MeToo situation.”

Tiffany Barnes, an associate professor at the University of Kentucky, said her research has shown that certain voters are more critical of women involved in sex scandals. Those who hold “hostile sexist attitudes,” and believe women have progressed too far in society, are less likely to reelect a female candidate following a sex scandal than a man, her 2014 research found.

 ?? ZACH GIBSON/GETTY ?? Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif., speaks during a news conference in April. Hill, a rising star in the Democratic Party, announced Sunday that she is resigning amid a House ethics probe.
ZACH GIBSON/GETTY Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif., speaks during a news conference in April. Hill, a rising star in the Democratic Party, announced Sunday that she is resigning amid a House ethics probe.

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