On Thursday afternoon, White House Chief of Staff John Kelly delivered dramatic remarks to the press, which included a detailed anecdote about Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.), which was intended to highlight the Florida Democrat’s pettiness and offensive partisanship. A day later, however, we learned that Kelly’s story was fiction.
Over the weekend, the 17 women in the Congressional Black Caucus issued a statement demanding Kelly apologize to Wilson, and a New York Times editorial published today makes the case that Kelly has a responsibility to do exactly that.
Maybe he simply misremembered what happened that day; we all make mistakes. But a video of the event subsequently showed that Ms. Wilson had made none of the string of boasts that Mr. Kelly put in her mouth.
Did Mr. Kelly quickly acknowledge his errors? No. Instead, in the days since, he and the White House have added to his mistakes by refusing to correct them. All evidence to the contrary, they have continued to insist on Mr. Kelly’s false version, compounding the grief of the Johnson family, who laid Sergeant Johnson to rest on Saturday.
This continued to be the case yesterday. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders participated in a forum discussion at George Washington University — Shareblue posted a video excerpt — and was asked if Kelly was prepared to acknowledge that his story wasn’t true. Sanders was emphatic in her response.
“I don’t think General Kelly was wrong, and therefore I don’t think he should offer an apology,” Sanders replied.









