Suddenly Texas Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee is concerned about discrediting law enforcement, after she has made a career out of denigrating them as racists out to kill black people.

Why the quick change?

Jackson Lee is concerned that the memo that is set to be released today by the House, after President Donald Trump gives his permission, believes the intention is to damage law enforcement, she told CNN’s Poppy Harlow on Friday.

“It is clear that, first of all, this is as characterized by the DOJ. It is misleading by the FBI, severe omissions that may impact on its credibility and truth,” she said. “And I believe it is done purposefully to discredit, as has been reported, law enforcement. And I think that’s tragic.”

She thinks it is “tragic?” Let’s take a look at some of what Rep. Jackson Lee has said and done that could be considered “tragic” and “done purposefully to — discredit law enforcement.”

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On Sept. 26, 2017 she took a knee on the floor of the House to show solidarity with NFL players who kneel for the National Anthem because they believe police are hunting and killing black men.

“There is no basis in the 1st Amendment that says that you cannot kneel for the national anthem or in front of the flag,” she said at the time, the Los Angeles Times reported.

“I kneel in honor of the 1st Amendment. I kneel because the flag is a symbol for freedom. I kneel because I’m going to stand against racism. I kneel because I will stand with those young men, and I’ll stand with our soldiers, and I’ll stand with America, because I kneel,” she said.

This is a woman who cannot keep staffers as she has been named, on more than one occasion, the “meanest member of Congress.”

In August 2014, Rep. Jackson Lee called for the Department of Justice to investigate “use of deadly force by police departments against unarmed African-American males,” on her website.

“In recent months, the nation has been repeatedly shocked by the killings of unarmed African Americans, mainly young African American males, by persons claiming, despite substantial and credible evidence to the contrary, that the use of lethal force was justified. The tragic killing of Michael Brown is just the latest example. Last month in Staten Island, unarmed Eric Garner, an asthmatic 43-year old father of six and grandparent, died from an unlawful chokehold administered by a New York Police Department officer who suspected Mr. Garner of selling an untaxed pack of cigarettes. “And closer to home, we all remember the outrageous case involving young Robbie Tolan, who was shot and seriously injured by a white Bellaire Police Department officer while in the driveway of his home, 15 to 20 feet away from the officer, had committed no crime, and whose innocence had been affirmed to the officer by his mother and father. “According to the FBI’s most recent accounts of ‘justifiable homicide,’ in the seven years between 2005 and 2012, a white police officer used deadly force against an African American person almost two times every week. Of those African American persons killed, 18 percent, or nearly one in every five, was under 21 years of age. In contrast, only 8.7 percent of white persons killed by police officers were younger than 21. “In 2012, Houston had an African American population of 23.7 percent. That same year, African Americans accounted for 48% percent of victims killed by the police. Chicago was even worse with a whopping 91% of police killings involving an African American victim, nearly three times their percentage of the city’s population. For New York, the comparable figures were 87% and 2836 percent. Across the country, in 2012 there were 739 justifiable homicide shootings by police and citizens and of these, 313 of the victims (42.35%) were African American. “This cannot and must not continue. That is why I am renewing my request to Attorney General Holder that in addition to investigating the killing of Michael Brown, the Department of Justice should also launch a nationwide review of problematic police departments and take appropriate action to ensure there is a zero tolerance policy when it comes to patterns or practices of police misconduct.

Rep. Jackson Lee did not mention the criminal activity of the “victims” or the fact that some attacked police and others resisted arrest.

And let’s take a look at some of the tweets from this new champion of law enforcement.

“Ferguson Police Department lacks credibility so DOJ should take the lead in the Michael Brown case to protect the equal rights of all people,” she tweeted in Aug, 2014.

“ @ ClevelandOhio mourns. A child is dead & response is not complete. America must train law enforcement and avoid killing innocent people,” she said in Dec. 2015.

“Terrible racial stereotypes underlay too many police shootings of African American males,” she tweeted in Dec. 2015 along with a story on police brutality from Vox.

“Sandra Bland case illustrates need to pass H.R. 2875, Law Enforcement Trust and Integrity Act. # TrooperLiedSandraDied # SayHerName,” she tweeted in Jan. 2016, with no evidence that the woman, Sandra Bland, who police say killed herself in her jail cell was murdered by anyone.

“What more can be done when another unarmed black man has once again been unlawfully killed by police? # TerenceCrutcher,” she wrote in Sept. 2016.

But now, as a memo is set to be released that will show some in the deep state, and at the top echelons of law enforcement, could have engaged in activity to target President Donald Trump and help Democrats, she has concerns about discrediting law enforcement.

Do you think Rep. Jackson Lee is a hypocrite? Tell us in the comments.