US politician resigns after using racial slur on Sacha Baron Cohen’s show

Republican Jason Spencer dropped trousers and exposed himself on ‘Who Is America?’

This image released by Showtime shows Jason Spencer in a scene from the series ‘Who Is America’, starring Sacha Baron Cohen.  Photograph: Showtime via AP
This image released by Showtime shows Jason Spencer in a scene from the series ‘Who Is America’, starring Sacha Baron Cohen. Photograph: Showtime via AP

A US politician has said he will resign after he exposed himself and shouted racial slurs on Sacha Baron Cohen's new TV show.

Georgia representative Jason Spencer has said he will step down at the end of the month, despite an earlier vow to serve out his term despite the fallout over an episode of the British actor's show, Who Is America?.

A one-sentence note from Mr Spencer reads: “This email/letter is to serve as an official resignation notice to your office that I will be resigning my post effective July 31, 2018.”

In Sunday night’s broadcast of the Showtime series, Mr Cohen poses as an Israeli military expert who persuades Mr Spencer to take part in several outlandish exercises. The representative is told they are making a counter-terrorism video.

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Mr Spencer repeatedly shouts a racial slur for black people after Mr Cohen tells him the tactic is useful for drawing bystanders’ attention to an unfolding attack.

Sacha Baron Cohen’s new show is ‘Who Is America?’. Photograph: Jean Baptiste Lacroix/Getty Images
Sacha Baron Cohen’s new show is ‘Who Is America?’. Photograph: Jean Baptiste Lacroix/Getty Images

He also drops his trousers, then his underwear, before backing his exposed rear end toward Mr Cohen while shouting “USA!” and “America!”

Mr Cohen had told Mr Spencer this would incite fear in homophobic jihadists.

The segment also shows Mr Spencer speaking with a mock Asian accent while using a selfie-stick to surreptitiously insert a camera phone between the legs of a woman dressed in traditional Muslim clothing.

David Ralston, the Republican speaker for the state house of representatives had led calls for Mr Spencer's immediate resignation.

Mr Spencer apologised for the “ridiculously ugly episode”, but initially refused to step down.

He lost a Republican primary for his seat on May 22nd, but he could have remained in public office through to the November election.–PA