The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ossoff’s resume is slightly inflated

- By Louis Jacobson Politifact Georgia

“I’ve got five years of experience as a national security staffer in the U.S. Congress.” — Jon Ossoff on Monday, Feb. 20, 2017 in a campaign appearance

In Georgia’s closely watched congressio­nal special election to succeed Republican Tom Price in the U.S. House, Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff has touted his policy experience in national security — and taken heat for allegedly embellishi­ng it.

A news release announcing his campaign on Jan. 5 reads: “A Georgia native who grew up in the Sixth District, Ossoff served Georgia as a national security staffer in Congress for five years before leaving government for the private sector.”

Ossoff, 30, continued to emphasize his experience on the campaign trail. However, opponents noted he had worked on Capitol Hill between 2007 and 2012 but had only earned his undergradu­ate degree from Georgetown University in 2009. That would make him a pretty junior staffer to be touting his national security experience.

Ossoff did work as a congressio­nal staffer for Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., five years, starting as a part-time legislativ­e correspond­ent, working 25-30 hours a week for two years while attending Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service. He spent the summer of 2009 traveling, returned to work as a legislativ­e assistant that August, ran Johnson’s re-election campaign from April to July 2010, then came back

to Johnson’s Capitol office and received a top-secret security clearance in March 2012 for work related to the annual National Defense Authorizat­ion Act.

The primary job of a legislativ­e correspond­ent is to answer mail from the lawmaker’s constituen­ts and to backfill for more senior office staffers when necessary. Ossoff ’s former supervisor­s, however, maintain he had substantia­lly more responsibi­lity than a typical legislativ­e correspond­ent.

Daraka Satcher, Johnson’s chief of staff from 2007 to 2009, said he and the congressma­n recognized that Ossoff, with his foreign-service school background, was precocious. “Putting just any college student in that situation would be malpractic­e, but honestly, Jon was not a typical college student,” Satcher said. “He handled the issues, so we felt very comfortabl­e” with the unusual arrangemen­t.

Johnson backed up Satcher’s descriptio­n. “I had no military assets in my district and was not a military guy,” Johnson told PolitiFact, “Jon’s level of informatio­n on the issue was much deeper than mine at that time. While he was a legislativ­e correspond­ent, he was learning how to be a legislativ­e assistant.”

Johnson’s office added that Ossoff played a key role in the House’s June 18, 2007, passage of a nonbinding resolution about the civil war in northern Uganda, just a few months after Ossoff joined the office.

Johnson said Ossoff also handled some more mundane duties, such as some informatio­n technology assignment­s. Still, he added, “to say that Jon staffed me on national security, that’s entirely, 100 percent correct.”

Norman Ornstein, a longtime Congress-watcher at the American Enterprise Institute, said Ossoff ’s statement amounts to “resume inflation,” though, in his opinion, it’s a “rather benign” example.

A better phrasing, Ornstein said, would have been that he spent “five years as a staffer in the U.S. Congress, including work on national security.”

Our ruling

Ossoff said, “I’ve got five years of experience as a national security staffer in the U.S. Congress.”

This descriptio­n certainly applies to his final three years on Capitol Hill, which were spent in middle- to seniorleve­l foreign policy posts. Whether it applies to his first two years working for the lawmaker is less clear-cut.

Ossoff at the time was an undergradu­ate student holding a part-time position that, in the Capitol Hill pecking order, was entry-level. That adds relevant context, and he left it out.

We rate the statement Half True.

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 ?? BILL BARROW / AP ?? Georgia Democratic congressio­nal candidate Jon Ossoff speaks to volunteers in his Cobb County campaign office. Ossoff is trying for an upset in a Republican-leaning district outside Atlanta. The primary is April 18 with a likely runoff on June 20.
BILL BARROW / AP Georgia Democratic congressio­nal candidate Jon Ossoff speaks to volunteers in his Cobb County campaign office. Ossoff is trying for an upset in a Republican-leaning district outside Atlanta. The primary is April 18 with a likely runoff on June 20.

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