The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Leaders demand lawmaker step down

Ga. House member apologizes for actions on TV show, won’t quit.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

On the eve of a testy runoff vote, Georgia political leaders and candidates united Monday to condemn a Republican state lawmaker who exposed himself and yelled racial slurs during an episode of Sacha Baron Cohen’s Showtime series.

House Speaker David Ralston urged the legislator, state Rep. Jason Spencer, to resign shortly after the episode of “Who is America?” aired Sunday night, and he was soon echoed by leaders and rank-and-file members from both sides of the aisle.

And the episode, which featured

Spencer scampering around a gym with his pants pulled down, was quickly injected into Tuesday’s GOP race for governor.

Secretary of State Brian Kemp removed Spencer’s name from his list of supporters, earning a dig from Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle.

“I’m just glad he didn’t endorse my campaign,” Cagle said as he prepared to embark on a nine-city fly-around tour.

Spencer on Monday apologized for the “ridiculous­ly ugly episode,” but he refused to step down. Although he lost the GOP primary in May, he remains in public office through the November general election.

“Sacha Baron Cohen and his associates took advantage of my paralyzing fear that my family would be attacked,” said Spencer, who added that he was told the techniques would deter “what I believed was an inevitable attack.”

He may still face official repercussi­ons: Georgia Republican leaders are researchin­g ways to reprimand him, short of calling a special session to oust him from office.

And Ralston’s office said bipartisan legislativ­e leaders — House Majority Leader Jon Burns and Minority Leader Bob Trammell — are discussing filing a joint ethics complaint targeting Spencer’s behavior.

Exploited ‘my fears’

The episode shows Cohen, who portrayed himself as an Israeli military expert, at a gym persuading Spencer to take part in what he was told was a counterter­rorism video.

Cohen gets Spencer to yell racial epithets, make offensive remarks about Chinese tourists and pull down his pants and shimmy his naked buttocks toward purported attackers while yelling “USA” and “America.” He was told these tactics ward off homophobic militants.

In another clip after the show’s credits, Spencer returns to the camera with a “message to the terrorists.” He then repeats a racial slur and stabs a knife into the groin area of a dummy clad in a black burqa before shoving another item into the dummy’s mouth.

At the end of the segment, Spencer reminds the audience he’s an elected official serving in the Georgia Legislatur­e. It ends with the Georgia peach logo flashing on screen.

It was the most humiliatin­g yet to air on Cohen’s new show, which last week featured several Republican lawmakers and gun rights supporters backing a fictitious program to teach kindergart­ners to use firearms.

Spencer told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on last week that he was considerin­g legal action against the show’s producers, and he claimed they “took advantage of my fears that I would be attacked by someone” to persuade him to appear.

“They exploited my state of mind for profit and notoriety,” said Spencer, who said he was denied the chance to have final approval over what will air. “This media company’s deceptive and fraudulent behavior is exactly why President Donald Trump was elected.”

Spencer has declined to comment further. Showtime has denied that Cohen or the show’s producers acted improperly.

‘No excuse’

Spencer was defeated by Republican challenger Steven Sainz in May after four terms representi­ng a conservati­ve southeast Georgia district, where he grabbed headlines that enraged lawmakers from both parties despite having little influence in the Legislatur­e.

He faced calls for resignatio­n late last year after he warned a black former state legislator that she won’t be “met with torches but something a lot more definitive” if she continued to advocate for the removal of Confederat­e statues in South Georgia.

And Republican leaders roundly criticized his legislativ­e proposal that would bar women from wearing burqas on public property, forcing him to withdraw the legislatio­n.

This year, he shifted his focus toward a bill that would have allowed adult survivors of child sexual abuse more time to file lawsuits. The bill didn’t pass amid powerful opposition from the Boy Scouts and some other nonprofit organizati­ons.

As word about the footage spread early Monday, a long list of prominent politician­s and civil rights organizati­ons called for Spencer’s resignatio­n and condemned his action. Gov. Nathan Deal called his language “appalling and offensive.”

”There is no excuse for this type of behavior, ever,” Deal said, “and I am saddened and disgusted by it.”

Democratic Party of Georgia Chairman DuBose Porter added, “Spencer has put a blemish on our state that even Ajax cannot remove.”

 ?? SHOWTIME ?? Jason Spencer shimmied his naked buttocks toward purported attackers in Sunday’s episode of “Who is America?”
SHOWTIME Jason Spencer shimmied his naked buttocks toward purported attackers in Sunday’s episode of “Who is America?”

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