A rising liberal star running for
Congress in Kansas has dropped out of the race over a 2005 federal
lawsuit in which she was accused of sexually harassing a male employee
whom she supervised.
Andrea Ramsey, 56, of Leawood, was looking to challenge incumbent
Republican Kevin Yoder in 2018 in the Kansas City-area 3rd District but
announced in a Facebook post that she would be ending her campaign
Friday. Ramsey called the
allegations made by her former employee at LabOne, Gary Funkhouser, “a
lie.”
“Twelve years ago, I eliminated an employee’s position,” Ramsey wrote.
“That man decided to bring a lawsuit against the company (not against
me). He named me in the allegations, claiming I fired him because he
refused to have sex with me. That is a lie.”
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Funkhouser worked under Ramsey at LabOne where she was an executive vice
president of human resources. Funkhouser claimed Ramsey came on to him
in 2005 during a business trip, the Kansas City Star reported.
“After I told her I was not interested in having a sexual relationship
with her, she stopped talking to me,” he wrote in a complaint. “In the
office she completely ignored me and avoided having any contact with
me.”
Funkhouser claimed Ramsey had his work station moved out of her office.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission closed the case on
Funkhouser’s claims, stating it was unable to determine if any “statutes
had been violated.”
Funkhouser then sued LabOne in federal court and both parties agreed to
dismiss the case in 2006. Multiple sources told the Kansas City Star
that Funkhouser and LabOne had reached a settlement.
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The allegations resurfaced after the Kansas City Star questioned Ramsey
about them.
Ramsey said the national Democratic party declined to support her over
the lawsuit.
“In its rush to claim the high ground in our roiling national
conversation about harassment, the Democratic Party has implemented a
zero-tolerance standard,” Ramsey said. “For me, that means a vindictive,
terminated employee’s false allegations are enough for the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) to decide not to support our
promising campaign. We are in a national moment where rough justice
stands in place of careful analysis, nuance and due process.”
Emily’s List, a liberal women’s group, which supported and raised
hundreds of thousands of dollars for Ramsey’s campaign, said they
supported the Democratic hopeful’s decision.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. |
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