The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ramsey ends Kansas congressio­nal run

Candidate faces allegation­s of sexual harassment.

- Jacey Fortin

A woman running to flip a Kansas congressio­nal seat from red to blue next year is ending her campaign after allegation­s surfaced that she had sexually harassed, and then fired, a former subordinat­e.

Andrea Ramsey, 56, is a retired business executive who worked in the nonprofit sector before deciding to run for office as a Democrat in next year’s congressio­nal midterm elections. She was one of a growing number of women inspired to seek office in the wake of President Donald Trump’s election.

But this month, The Kansas City Star newspaper asked her about a 2005 lawsuit that accused her of sexually harassing a man at LabOne, where she was the executive vice president of human resources, and then firing him after he rejected her advances, a claim Ramsey denies.

The suit was against the company, not Ramsey specifical­ly, and it was settled in 2006.

“Twelve years ago, I eliminated an employee’s position,” Ramsey said in a letter posted to Facebook on Friday.

“That man decided to bring a lawsuit against the company (not against me). He named me in the allegation­s, claiming I fired him because he refused to have sex with me. That is a lie.”

Ramsey is the rare — perhaps the only — woman in public life to face consequenc­es from a sexual harassment accusation in the weeks since journalist­ic exposés spawned the #MeToo movement.

She said that her political opponents were using the false allegation­s against her, and she criticized the Democratic Party for implementi­ng a “zero tolerance standard.”

“For me, that means a vindictive, terminated employee’s false allegation­s are enough for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee (DCCC) to decide not to support our promising campaign,” Ramsey added.

Meredith Kelly, communicat­ions director of the DCCC, said in an emailed statement: “Members and candidates must all be held to the highest standard.

“If anyone is guilty of sexual harassment or sexual assault, that person should not hold public office.”

Ramsey was one of several Democrats running to contest the House seat held by Rep. Kevin Yoder in next year’s midterm elections.

Although the Democratic primary is not until August, Ramsey said earlier this month that her campaign had already raised hundreds of thousands of dollars.

She has never held public office, but said she was emboldened to try when Yoder voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

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