Flanked by a pair of supporters in wheelchairs, Democrat Wendy Davis defended a controversial attack ad that in recent days has roiled the race for Texas governor. The ad criticizes Davis’s opponent, Republican Greg Abbott, for denying justice to accident victims despite winning millions after he himself was paralyzed.
“In 1984, Greg Abbott sought out and received justice following a horrible injury, rightly so,” Davis, a state senator, said at a Forth Worth, Texas, news conference. “But then he turned around and built his career working to deny the very same justice that he received to his fellow Texans rightly seeking it for themselves.”
Abbott, the state’s attorney general, has been in a wheelchair since the age of 26, when he was hit by a tree while jogging in Houston.
The ad, titled “Justice” and released Friday, caused outrage not just in the Abbott camp but among some commentators on both sides. Texas Republicans have demanded that it be taken off the air. Earlier Monday, the Abbott campaign released a video that compiled media condemnations of the ad.
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Others, including some conservatives, have defended the ad, noting that Abbott’s campaign has run TV commercials that highlight his disability in an effort to humanize him.
Almost everyone agrees that Abbott’s clear record — as both a judge and Texas attorney general — of restricting access to the courts is a legitimate issue. But the ad struck some as an effort to exploit Abbott’s disability since it opens with a shot of a wheelchair that seems to invoke the attorney general and it tells viewers that Abbott “sued and got millions” without expressing sympathy for his misfortune.
At Monday’s press conference, Davis sought to turn the focus back to the hypocrisy issue.
“Greg Abbott got his justice,” she said. “Why doesn’t he believe that a rape survivor or a person with a disability or a victim paralyzed forever … should get justice too? What makes Greg Abbott think it’s okay to deny them, his fellow Texans, the justice that he rightly went to court to receive?”









