From Yahoo:
“Nancy Pelosi says her visit
to a hair salon was a 'setup.' Stylist backs her up”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said
Wednesday she was set up by a San Francisco salon where she was videotaped not
wearing a face mask after getting her hair washed, in violation of the city’s
coronavirus restrictions. “This salon owes me an apology,” Pelosi said in
response to questions from reporters at the end of a news conference on the
Democrats' proposed coronavirus relief act that is stalled in the Senate. "It
was clearly a setup," she said. "I take responsibility for falling
for a setup by a neighborhood salon I’ve gone to for many years.” The eSalon's
owner, Erica Kious, denied Pelosi's claim. She said that her salon has been
closed for months because of the pandemic and that she found Pelosi's remarks
"hurtful." "I just thought about, you know, my staff and people
not being able to work and make money and provide for their families. And if
she's in there comfortably, without a mask and feeling safe, then why are we
shut down?" Kious told Fox News' Tucker Carlson on Wednesday evening. Less
than two hours later, Jonathan DeNardo, the stylist who blew out Pelosi's hair,
released a statement through an attorney contradicting Kious. The statement
says the law firm is in possession of photographs and videotape that show that
Kious has been operating her salon in violation of state and local restrictions
since April. The statement also says that Kious authorized Pelosi coming to the
salon for her blow out, and that she was critical of the House speaker because
she erroneously believed Pelosi was behind the restrictions that shut down her
salon. (The rules were put in place by Gov. Gavin Newsom and San Francisco
Mayor London Breed.) "Ms. Kious has also been actively encouraging and
almost forcing stylists who operate at eSalon to violate such orders for her
own financial benefit in the form of receiving lease payments," the
statement says. "The fact that Ms. Kious is now objecting to Speaker
Pelosi’s presence at eSalon, and from a simple surface-level review of Ms.
Kious’ political leanings, it appears Ms. Kious is furthering a set-up of
Speaker Pelosi for her own vain aspirations."
The brouhaha began on Monday,
when security camera footage at the eSalon showed Pelosi inside, passing by
with wet hair and a mask wrapped around her neck and being trailed by a hair
stylist who was wearing a mask. Kious gave the footage to Fox News, which first
reported the story Tuesday. The images prompted a torrent of criticism
Wednesday that Pelosi and other Democrats were hypocritical for placing
restrictions on Americans that they themselves are unwilling to follow. President
Trump was among the Republicans who weighed in. “Crazy Nancy Pelosi is being
decimated for having a beauty parlor opened, when all others are closed, and
for not wearing a Mask — despite constantly lecturing everyone else,” Trump
tweeted Wednesday morning. “We will almost certainly take back the House, and
send Nancy packing!”
Businesses such as hair salons
are subject to a patchwork of regulations in California, based in part on how
severe the coronavirus crisis is in the counties and cities where they are
based. In San Francisco, hair salons were not allowed to do any business on
Monday, but as of Tuesday they are allowed to offer services outdoors. The
state requires Californians to wear face masks outside the home when social
distancing isn't possible. Trump long showed reluctance to wearing a mask and
has been seen wearing one in public just a few times. Republicans have
routinely flouted public health guidelines aimed at slowing the pandemic, such
as when more than 1,500 mostly maskless people crowded on the White House lawn
last week to watch the president accept the Republican nomination for a second
term. But political observers say Pelosi getting her hair blown out inside a
salon on Monday is a problem nevertheless because her actions contradict her
words. Jessica Levinson, director of Loyola Law School's Public Service
Institute, compared the video to a “let them eat cake” moment. “For all we know
she had her mask down for 15 seconds and four feet, but the damage it does is
enormous,” Levinson said. “It gives us all this great/horrible visual to look
at and say, ‘Nancy Pelosi is an elitist who is totally unconcerned for working
people and just cares about how she looks on national TV and Democrats don’t
feel your pain.’” Pelosi said someone at the salon told her they were allowed
to accommodate one customer at a time, and that she wore a mask except for when
her hair was being washed. “I just had my hair washed. I don’t wear a mask when
I’m washing my hair. Do you wear a mask when you’re washing your hair?” Pelosi
said. “And that picture is when I just came out of the bowl.” A spokesman for
Pelosi said that normally, the House speaker has a stylist come to her house to
do her hair, but she wasn’t available on Monday. So the stylist suggested
Pelosi’s team contact one of her former colleagues, DeNardo, who rents a chair
at eSalon. An assistant to Pelosi called DeNardo on Sunday and asked him if he
could come to Pelosi’s house. He said he could but also said the salon was
allowed to have customers inside one at a time, so the speaker could come there.
Republicans argued that Pelosi’s
violation of city codes show that she was a hypocrite who felt the rules were
above her, and that the restrictions in San Francisco need to be eased. “It’s
the type of hypocrisy you get out of politicians, but the multiple whammies of
doing it in her own backyard when she’s literally the most powerful women in
America is really offensive,” said Harmeet Dhillon, a GOP state official who
sued California on behalf of hair stylists, nail salons and other businesses shuttered
because of the pandemic. “Every woman in California knows what the law is,”
Dhillon said, adding that she had taken to dying her hair and clipping her
husband’s hair at their San Francisco home, while friends drove to counties
where salons were allowed to operate outdoors. Some Democrats also warned that
the video is ready-made for Trump to exploit. But others argued that this was
one instant in the political cycle that would be quickly subsumed by the next
viral moment. “In the culture wars where everyone’s hypersensitive to any
transgression on either side, I can see this fitting into a narrative that
Democrats want a different set of rules for themselves. But it’s one haircut.
It’s not going to have a huge impact on the election,” said Rose Kapolczynski,
longtime advisor to former Sen. Barbara Boxer. She added that Pelosi is a role
model of mask wearing, particularly compared with Trump and members of his
administration. “And I have to say, Nancy Pelosi has shown wearing a mask can
be stylish, too,” Kapolczynski said.
^ Pelosi can try and spin it to
show she is the “victim” in all of this, but ignorance of the law is not an
excuse. If the Speaker of the House of Representatives in Washington DC doesn’t
know or understand the rules in her own City and State then what hope do the
ordinary citizens have of knowing and understanding them? And if she did know
and understand the law and simply care to follow it then that says a lot too.
Either way Pelosi is not the “victim” here. She has been in Congress since 1987
and so should know what the laws are or at least where to find out the laws. The
salon may have “set her up” but if she knew the City and State laws then she
would have known to tell the salon that she couldn’t go inside for her haircut.
She did not do that. There are 3 guilty parties here: the salon, the
hairdresser and Nancy Pelosi. All of them knowingly broke City and State laws
and all of them should be held accountable. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/hair-salon-fall-nancy-pelosi-000259729.html
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