House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on May 25 revoked his endorsement of Ted Howze, a candidate for a California House district, after the emergence of disturbing social media posts that disparaged Democrats, Muslims, and a survivor of a mass shooting.
Howze responded to the allegations in a statement that acknowledged the content as “negative and ugly ideas,” but said someone else authored and posted the messages without his knowledge or consent.
“Like many folks in my middle-age group, I learned the very hard lesson to never allow anyone access to social media accounts or passwords,” Howze said, according to Politico. “I made the mistake of allowing others access to these accounts unknowingly—and I am angered, horrified, and extremely offended that these ugly ideas were shared or posted by those individuals several years ago.”
Howze is running against Josh Harder, a Democrat, who won California’s 10th Congressional District seat from Republican Jeff Denham in 2018.
One of the posts, dated Feb. 8, 2018, states, “I am still waiting for any Democrat, any, to explain the reasoning for referring to illegal immigrants, more accurately criminal foreign invaders, as ‘Dreamers’?”
“I'll never understand how these people can so blindly divorce themselves from reality and the sentiment of average Americans,” the post continued.
Following revelations about the content of the controversial posts, Howze has faced mounting backlash, including withdrawals of support from state Republicans and local officials.
National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) Chairman Tom Emmer, voicing his opposition, told Politico in a statement, “These statements are unacceptable and not indicative of the Republican Party and what we are building here at the NRCC with our diverse slate of candidates.”
While McCarthy expressed his opposition to the posts, he didn’t officially pull his endorsement until May 25.