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Congressman’s ex-aide says she was fired for being pregnant

The lawsuit argues Cuellar's firing of acting chief of staff Kristie Small constituted both sex and pregnancy discrimination in violation of the Congressional Accountability Act, which governs how lawmakers and aides report sexual misconduct claims.

FILE - In this Sept. 13, 2017, file photo, Rep. Henry Cuellar (D., Texas) speaks with reporters outside the West Wing after a bipartisan meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House, in Washington. Kristie Small, a former senior aide to Cuellar, filed a lawsuit against the Texas Democrat in Washington on Monday that claims she was wrongly fired for being pregnant. The lawsuit argues Cuellar's firing of Small was both sex and pregnancy discrimination in violation of the Congressional Accountability Act of 1995.
FILE - In this Sept. 13, 2017, file photo, Rep. Henry Cuellar (D., Texas) speaks with reporters outside the West Wing after a bipartisan meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House, in Washington. Kristie Small, a former senior aide to Cuellar, filed a lawsuit against the Texas Democrat in Washington on Monday that claims she was wrongly fired for being pregnant. The lawsuit argues Cuellar's firing of Small was both sex and pregnancy discrimination in violation of the Congressional Accountability Act of 1995.Read moreAlex Brandon / AP

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A former senior aide to U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar has filed a lawsuit against the Texas Democrat that claims he wrongly fired her for being pregnant.

Kristie Small filed the federal suit in Washington on Monday against Cuellar after being terminated as his acting chief of staff last October. The former aide initially filed a similar complaint with a special congressional office.

The lawsuit argues Cuellar's firing of Small constituted both sex and pregnancy discrimination in violation of the Congressional Accountability Act, which governs how lawmakers and aides report sexual misconduct claims.

It states that after Small emailed Cuellar to discuss her forthcoming maternity leave, the congressman told her she was on a 90-day “probation period” he has for every new employee. Cuellar later met with Small to discuss some issues related to her work performance and extended the probationary period by 30 days before firing her for “failure to perform during the probationary period.”

"Plaintiff asked several of her colleagues about probation. None of them had been on a probationary period or knew anything about it. As far as she knows, plaintiff was the only pregnant female employee, and she was the only employee subject to a probationary period," the lawsuit said.

Olya Voytovich, a spokeswoman for Cuellar, said in an emailed statement the congressman's office adamantly denies Small's termination was based on her gender or pregnancy. Voytovich said it is against office policy to discuss details regarding internal personnel matters but they will address the matter in court.

"Please be assured, however, that Ms. Small's complaint does not provide a complete or accurate representation of her employment with the Office of Congressman Cuellar or the circumstances of the termination of her employment," Voytovich said.

Alan Lescht, an attorney representing Small, did not immediately return a request for comment on Tuesday.