Call & Times

Female candidate quits Kansas race over 2005 harassment suit

- By JOHN HANNA AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. — A female congressio­nal candidate dropped out of the Kansas race Friday over a 12-year-old lawsuit accusing her of sexually harassing a male subordinat­e, an unusual case of a woman facing the sort of misconduct allegation­s that have forced numerous men out of their jobs in recent weeks.

Andrea Ramsey announced in a Facebook post that she was ending her campaign, calling allegation­s that she harassed her former employee and then retaliated against him “a lie.” The employee, Gary Funkhouser, filed the lawsuit against OneLab Inc., the Kansas City-area company where Ramsey worked as a vice president. The two parties agreed to dismiss the lawsuit after settlement talks.

Ramsey was seeking the Democratic nomination in the 3rd District in the Kansas City area, hoping to win the right to challenge four-term incumbent Republican Kevin Yoder next year. The district contains a mix of GOP-leaning suburbs and heavily Democratic city neighborho­ods. Democrat Hillary Clinton carried it in last year’s presidenti­al election.

The Kansas City Star first reported about the lawsuit and said Ramsey dropped out after it asked her about the case.

Ramsey said “real change” has come in handling harassment complaints and timely and thorough investigat­ions are “a very good thing.” But, in her own case, she said, “These false allegation­s are disgracefu­l and demean the moment this country is in.”

“On balance, it is far more important for me that women are stepping forward to tell their stories and confront their harassers than it is to continue our campaign,” she said.

Funkhouser filed the federal lawsuit in October 2005, four months after he was fired as a human resources manager at OneLab. Ramsey, then known as Andrea Thomas, was the company’s executive vice president for human resources, a position she left in April 2006 for another job.

Funkhouser said he rebuffed sexual advances from Ramsey and, after he did, she shunned him, moved his office, criticized his work and then fired him in June 2005. The company denied those allegation­s, and Ramsey was not named as a defendant.

In her Facebook post, Ramsey said she “eliminated an employee’s position,” calling Funkhouser “vindictive.”

Court records show that Funkhouser and the company

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