So I Got a Call From The New York Times...
The Latest Trump Move Involving Minneapolis Is Going to Trigger a Lib Meltdown
Here’s Why That ICE Agent Involved in the Minneapolis Shooting Is in Hiding
Latest NYT Piece on Mamdani Shows How Being an American Liberal Is Just...
Why the Hell Should We Care If Democrats Don’t?
Israel Misunderstood
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 303: The Best of St. Paul
Frey: Let Minneapolis Get Back to Running Daycares
You Won't Believe What These Hotels Are Doing to ICE Agents
Trump Questions Why Minnesotans Are Harassing ICE, Civilians
Men Need to Work
Greenland and the Return of Great-Power Politics
INSANITY: Mob of Leftist Rioters Stab and Beat Anti-Islam Activist in Minneapolis
U.S. Strike in Syria Kills Terrorist Linked to Murder of American Soldiers
Florida Man Convicted of $4.5M Scheme to Defraud U.S. Military Fuel Program
Tipsheet

Politifact Calls Out Kamala Harris for Falsely Claiming Kavanaugh Called Birth Control 'Abortion-Inducing Drugs'

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) was given a “false” rating by Politifact Monday for her deceptively edited video in a tweet claiming that Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh had called birth control “abortion-inducing drugs.”

Advertisement

The fact-checker pointed out that Harris’s tweet "takes Kavanaugh’s statement out of context.”

“Harris cut an important second out of the clip — the attribution,” they explain. “Kavanaugh said, ‘They said filling out the form would make them complicit in the provision of the abortion-inducing drugs that they were, as a religious matter, objecting to.’”

Kerri Kupec, a Justice Department spokeswoman, explained that Kavanaugh was simply summarizing the position of the religious group, Priests for Life, which held that belief.

"It’s very clear he’s characterizing their position, which was held by all the Catholic organizations within that set of cases," Kupec said. "But even within characterizing their position, if you look at the dissent, it’s still not a blanket description of birth control."

Harris’s office continued to push back Monday, insisting that Kavanaugh should have disagreed with the religious group’s characterization of birth control in his response.

Advertisement

Related:

KAMALA HARRIS

"In his full answer, he uses the term uncritically," Lily Adams, communications director for Harris, claimed to Politifact. "He doesn’t say ‘so-called,’ ‘I don’t agree with it,’ there’s no caveat that he gives that he does not agree with the term."

Sen. Harris has yet to take down the tweet with the deceptively edited video.

Sen. Orrin Hatch’s (R-UT) office cited the Politifact rating and pointed out that Sen. Harris was not the only one inaccurately accusing Kavanaugh of calling birth control “abortion-inducing drugs.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement