David Stringer
Quick Facts
Biography
David Stringer is an American attorney, businessman, and politician who was elected in 2016 to represent District 1 in the Arizona House of Representatives. In 2018, he resigned after refusing to cooperate with an ethics investigation into charges against him for sexually molesting two boys in 1983. Before his resignation from the Arizona House, he had been a Republican Party precinct committeeman and state committeeman, and a co-chairman of the county GOP's finance committee.
Education
Stringer is a graduate of George Washington University and the University of Baltimore School of Law. He is enrolled in a master's degree program at Arizona State University.
Elections
In 2016, Stringer and incumbent Noel W. Campbell defeated Yavapai County Supervisor Chip Davis in the Republican primary. They went on to defeat Democrat Peter Pierson and Green Haryaksha Gregor Knauer in the general election.
Controversies
In June 2018, during a livestreamed speech at the Yavapai County Republican Men's Forum, Stringer commented that "there aren't enough white kids to go around", in reference to public school integration.He went on to say that immigration is "politically destabilizing" and is "an existential threat to the United States."Stringer's comments were derided as racist by the Anti-Defamation League and ProgressNow Arizona, while the Arizona Republican Party denounced his comments. Stringer subsequently defended his opinion as a "value judgement" that "wasn't denigrating anybody", while apologizing to anyone he offended.
In November 2018, Stringer was pressured to resign from leadership positions in House committees due to remarks made to Arizona State University students following a presentation at a political history and leadership club.Stringer stated that when European immigrants come to the United States that "After the second or third generation, everybody looks the same, everybody talks the same. But that's not the case with African-Americans and other racial groups, because they don't melt in, they don't blend in." Stringer subsequently resigned from his position as committee chair for the House Sentencing and Recidivism Reform Committee.On December 4, the Prescott City Council, by a vote of 6-1, passed a resolution, "that demands Stringer step down immediately so that a replacement can be named before the legislative session begins in 2019."
On January 25, 2019, the Phoenix New Times reported that Stringer had been charged in 1983 with five sex offenses, including two child pornography charges, while he was living in Baltimore. He had accepted a plea bargain on charges of paying two boys for sex, one of whom was developmentally disabled, and was sentenced to five years probation. In 1990, he had the charges expunged from his record. In response to calls for his resignation, Stringer confirmed that he had been arrested and charged with the offenses but stated that he would not be resigning from the Arizona house. On March 27, 2019, facing a deadline to hand over documents regarding his 2018 comments and the 1983 sex offenses, he abruptly resigned from the Arizona House.
In early 2018, Stringer had been recorded as saying that sex trafficking was not a concern and that, "I don't think we should demonize it."