The controversy over Wendy Davis’ personal history would never have erupted were it not for Davis’ gender, according to one Texas Republican.
“If this involved a man running for office, none of this would ever come up,” Becky Haskin, a former GOP colleague of Davis on the Fort Worth city council, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
“It’s so sad. Every time I ran, somebody said I needed to be home with my kids,” Haskin added. “Nobody ever talks about men being responsible parents.”
The Dallas Morning News reported Saturday evening that Davis inaccurately conveyed some details of her biography—among them, describing herself as a teenage single mother when her divorce was not finalized until she was 21. It also reported that her second husband had helped her pay for college and law school, a detail that Davis hasn’t included in the inspiring, up-by-the-bootstraps personal story she has used on the campaign trail.
The report has received national attention and handed the campaign of Greg Abbott, Davis’ likely Republican opponent, a potentially damaging line of attack.
Many of the conservative responses to the story appear to bear Haskin out. As msnbc documented, several right-wing pundits slammed Davis not for being inaccurate, but for prioritizing her career despite having a family.
“Wendy Davis apparently abandoned her children, had her husband foot her bills, and divorced after adultery accusations,” tweeted Ben Shapiro, a prominent conservative writer, in one typical example.
The newspaper report included an anonymous quote from a different former colleague of Davis on the city council, who called Davis “tremendously ambitious,” adding: “She’s not going to let family or raising children or anything else get in her way.”
“What that comment really tells you is how hard Wendy works,” Haskin told the Star-Telegram.









