U.S. Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) speaks at a press conference on border security at the U.S.
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The White House on Sunday slammed Sen. Katie Britt, R-Al., for misrepresenting her comments on sex trafficking to attack President Joe Biden’s border policy.
“Instead of telling more debunked lies to justify opposing the toughest bipartisan border legislation in modern history, Senator Britt should stop choosing human smugglers and fentanyl traffickers over our national security and the Border Patrol Union,” White House Spokesman Andrew Bates said in a statement.
The White House joined a chorus of Britt critics. The Alabama senator has been widely criticized, including by some on the right, for choosing to deliver her rebuttal to Biden’s State of the Union from her kitchen and for her often-theatrical tone during the speech.
Britt took even more heat after independent journalist Jonathan Katz first exposed her for recycling a 20-year-old anecdote about a victim of sex trafficking and presenting it as a result of the current administration’s border policy.
Sean Ross, Britt’s spokesperson, on Saturday denied any allegations of misrepresentation.
“The story Senator Britt told was 100% correct,” Ross said in a statement to CNBC on Saturday. “But there are more innocent victims of that kind of disgusting, brutal trafficking by the cartels than ever before right now.”
Britt on Sunday doubled down on that denial. She argued that in her rebuttal she made clear that the woman who was the focus of her comments had experienced sex trafficking decades earlier during her childhood, and that it had not happened during the Biden administration.
“I very clearly said I spoke to a woman who told me about when she was trafficked when she was 12. So I didn’t say a teenager. I didn’t say a young woman — a grown woman, a woman who was trafficked when she was 12,” Britt said on “Fox News Sunday.”
In her State of the Union rebuttal, Britt references “a woman” who “had been…
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