
'slip of tongue': gop rep. Apologizes over 'colored babies' remark
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An Oklahoma GOP representative was condemned after he used the term "colored babies" during an anti-abortion bill debate. Rep. Brad Boles (R-Marlow) said his controversial comment
had been "a slip of tongue" in an apology following Tuesday's debate on the House floor, according to _The Oklahoman_. During the debate, Rep. Boles said: "In 2017,
862,000 babies were aborted. 28 percent of those babies were colored babies. 240,000 black kids, 215 Hispanic kids. These kids mattered and I'm here to advocate for them as well."
Rep. Boles did not state where he had obtained the statistics to support his claim, although a 2019 Guttmacher Institute (GI) report did show a similar figure of 862,320 abortions in
clinical settings between 2014 and 2017. The same GI report said the number of abortions in 2017 had fallen to its lowest rate since the procedure was legalized in 1973. An online version of
the report did not mention the other figures stated by Rep. Boles. Later on Tuesday, Rep. Boles apologized on the House floor and claimed the usage of the term "was not what it was
intended to be." He added: "Earlier today, I made a mistake on the House floor. We were debating a passionate bill, and through the slip of the tongue, I said a word that was not
what it was intended to be, and so I apologize for any of the members of the House or that listed online that I may have offended." Rep. Boles' comments were made as he debated in
favor of HB2441, a fetal heartbeat bill, that would outlaw abortions in the state once "cardiac activity" is detected in the fetus. The term "colored" is considered to be
extremely offensive and was used during the height of the Jim Crow era that would use the word to restrict or confine access to facilities and common areas to African Americans, effectively
keeping them apart from white Americans. In a statement, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Oklahoma condemned Boles' comments and called Rep Boles to engage with
conversations about race equity. ACLU Executive Director Tamya Cox-Toure said: "It is disgraceful that in 2021 we still have elected officials like Rep. Boles use racist rhetoric such
as 'colored on the floor of the People's House. "Rep. Boles and his colleagues should not only commit to engaging in conversations about race equity work with the experts in
our state but also actively check their colleagues on problematic behavior." Rep. Boles was first elected to serve Oklahoma's 51st district in 2018. _Newsweek_ has contacted Rep.
Boles for comment.