Rep. Weiner announces his resignation
WASHINGTON
He had gone from the halls of Congress to the front pages of the
New York tabloids, providing ceaseless fodder as cringe-worthy
evidence of his sexually charged online dalliances leaked out and
top Democrats pushed for his resignation.
On Thursday afternoon, the 46-year-old struck a sober tone at
the podium of the senior center in Brooklyn where he launched a
campaign for City Council in 1992. He stood alone; his pregnant
wife, Huma Abedin, remained at home while he officially ended the
only career he has ever known.
But like other developments in the tawdry drama, the press
conference was marked by profanity and low-brow antics. After
recounting the beginning of his political career and proclaiming
that there is "no higher honor" than to represent one's
neighbors, he said he initially hoped to continue his work but then
realized "the distraction that I have created has made that
impossible." With that, he apologized and resigned.
The seniors, many of them former supporters, groaned. Some in
the room cheered. One man yelled out:
"Buh-bye, pervert!"
Another jumped up seconds later and began to shout questions
about the congressman's genitals. The din in the room reached a
crescendo as dozens of cameras pivoted, reporters gasped and some
of the seniors shouted for the man to sit down. Weiner grew
slightly flushed but continued speaking. A police officer
approached and told him to quiet down for the remainder of Weiner's
remarks, which lasted just under four minutes. As the congressman
left the podium, the loud heckler bellowed: "Will you maintain
your hot physique and your smooth sexy chest?"
The circus-like distraction had overshadowed the main event, a
fitting metaphor for the congressman's career. The man behind it
turned out to be a writer for the Howard Stern Show named Benjy
Bronk.
Many of the spectators said the episode was a startling finale
for a once-promising hometown politician.
"It was pathetic and sad," said online publisher Binyamin
Jolkovsky, 42. "A guy built a career, made it three-fourths of the
way up the hill and then it all collapses."
Known as brash, liberal and ambitious, the seven-term
congressman had run for mayor of New York in 2005 and had been
expected to do so again. He had raised $4 million in campaign funds
so far. Congress.
On Thursday, he hinted that he would stay involved in public
life in some capacity.
"I got into politics to help give voice to the many that simply
did not have one," he said. "Now I'll be looking for other ways
to contribute my talents to make sure we live up to that most New
York and American of ideals."
He did not take questions.
Democratic Party leaders, concerned that Weiner could weigh the
party down in the 2012 elections, had welcomed the announcement
after days spent trying to coax, push and finally coerce the
wayward politician into quitting.
"Congressman Weiner exercised poor judgment in his actions and
poor judgment in his reaction to the revelations," House
Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement released moments
after he spoke. "Today, he made the right judgment in resigning."
He did not explain his presence in New York, several days after
issuing a statement that said he was seeking treatment. Other
Democrats said he had left the city to do so.
Weiner's departure marks the end of a bizarre period born of the
New Yorker's use of social media such as Twitter and Facebook.
His problems began on May 28 when a website run by conservative
commentator Andrew Breitbart posted a lewd photograph of an
underwear-clad crotch and said it had been sent from Weiner's
Twitter account to a Seattle woman.
And as the scandalous chapter neared its conclusion, a former
pornography actress who exchanged emails and messages over Twitter
with him said Wednesday at a news conference he had asked her to
lie about their interactions.
Ginger Lee said she and Weiner exchanged about 100 emails
between March and June after Lee posted a supportive statement
about the congressman on her blog. He then contacted her on
Twitter, Lee said. They mostly discussed politics, but he would
often turn the conversation to sex, she said.
"`I have wardrobe demands, too. I need to highlight my
package,"' Weiner wrote Lee, in an email read aloud at the news
conference by Lee's attorney.
Weiner's initial reaction after the first photo became public
more than two weeks ago was to lie, and he did so repeatedly,
saying his Twitter account had been hacked.
But he pointedly did not report the incident to law enforcement
-- a step that could have opened him to charges of far more serious
wrongdoing.
Nor were his public denials persuasive, especially when he told
one interviewer he could not "say with certitude" that he wasn't
the faceless man in the underwear photo.
His eventual confession triggered a tabloid-style frenzy in
print and online that only grew more pronounced a few days later
when an X-rated photo surfaced on a website.
After initially calling for a House ethics investigation, Pelosi
ramped up the pressure on Saturday when she joined with Rep. Steve
Israel of New York and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida,
leader of the Democratic National Committee, in calling on Weiner
to step down.
President Barack Obama added to the pressure two days later,
saying if he were in Weiner's situation, he would resign.
On Wednesday, Democrats let it be known the party's leadership
in the House would be meeting within 24 hours to consider sanctions
against Weiner, including possibly stripping him of his committee
assignment.
Weiner was said to have telephoned Pelosi and Israel, the head
of the party campaign committee, as they attended a White House
picnic on Wednesday evening to tell them of his plans to quit.
Several officials have said in recent days that Weiner was
reluctant to make any decision about his career without speaking
with his wife, a top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton, who had been overseas since shortly after the scandal
broke. The trip ended Tuesday night.
Weiner's outspoken, in-your-face style cheered liberal
supporters and angered conservatives. He even irritated some party
leaders in 2009 when he led the charge for a government-run health
care system long after the White House had made it clear that Obama
was opposed.
Weiner's district includes parts of Queens and Brooklyn. New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has the authority to call a special election
to fill the seat once the congressman submits his resignation.