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KS Congressional candidate caught lying in TV ad: AP

The Associated Press has done a Fact Check on statements by Democrat candidate Sharice Davids, who is running in the Third Congressional District that encompasses Overland Park and Johnson County Kansas. The conclusion? She’s lying in her most recent commercial.

In the television ad attacking her Republican opponent, Davids looks directly into the camera and declares: “I don’t support abolishing ICE.”

She’s responding to an earlier Republican ad that plays a brief part of an interview in July in which she says the exact opposite.

Abolishing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been a rallying cry for some on the political left, who accuse the agency of using heavy-handed tactics under President Donald Trump in rounding up immigrants living in the country illegally. But Republicans and many moderate Democrats say that abolishing it is a step too far.

Davids, an admitted socialist, scored a surprising victory in a crowded Democratic primary on Aug. 7 and will face Republican Rep. Kevin Yoder in November. She has gained national attention for her unusual resume as an LGBT and Native American lawyer and mixed-martial arts fighter. She has implied that she is the first Native American candidate for Congress in Kansas. That milestone actually happened over 100 years ago when a Republican Native American Kansas representative won and served Kansas and then eventually became Vice President of the United States.

DAVIDS AD: “You probably saw an ad from Kevin Yoder’s special interest friends, twisting my words. Well, they’re wrong. I don’t support abolishing ICE. I do support bipartisan immigration reform, with strong borders and a pathway to citizenship, especially for those who serve in our military,” she says in the ad, which has been running on television in the Kansas City market in the last week.

THE FACTS: Republicans aren’t twisting her words but citing what she said during a July 21 podcast. When she was asked directly whether she supported abolishing ICE, Davids responded: “I do. I would, I would.”

Since The Kansas City Star first reported on the podcast two weeks ago, Davids has said in statements to news organizations, including The Associated Press on Wednesday, that she does not support abolishing ICE but favors comprehensive immigration reform.

Asked to explain the contradiction, and apparent example of lying, the Davids campaign said the ad was consistent with her views before she won the primary. As an example, the campaign pointed to comments she made in a June interview with The Star’s editorial board, but the specific issue of abolishing ICE did not arise in that interview. Instead, she spoke in broader terms about her belief that talking about all immigrants as a national security risk dehumanizes them.

The July 21 podcast interview cited by Republicans was part of the Millennial Politics Podcast, sponsored by GCK Consulting, a Democratic-leaning, Washington, D.C., firm that helps elect millennial candidates. The host was Jordan Valerie Allen, the podcast’s politics editor and communications director for Run With Pride, a PAC working to elect LGBT candidates. It endorsed Davids.

During part of the podcast, Davids discusses her concerns about having ICE handle immigration issues “in terms of policing,” which she said was the wrong framework.

Nearly 33 minutes into the interview, Allen asked: “And just to clarify, you do support abolishing ICE?”

Davids answered: “I do. I would, I would.”

The Washington Post later reported that Davids said she had never endorsed abolishing ICE and had “stammered briefly” in answering the question.

But in the podcast, Davids then mentioned defunding ICE, which she says is “essentially the same thing” as abolishing the agency.

There is no indication how the revelation of lying will affect the Davids campaign.

–The Associated Press and wire services

 

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