On the May 3 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, host Wolf Blitzer
observed that Washington
is "no stranger to sex scandals," then provided viewers with
examples of scandals involving only Democrats. During the segment, Blitzer was
discussing the "DC
Madam" scandal that has already led
to the resignation
of Deputy Secretary of State Randall L. Tobias, the first director of U.S. Foreign Assistance and administrator of the U.S. Agency for International
Development.
Blitzer listed three sex scandals: former President Bill
Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky (1998), former Sen. Gary
Hart's (D-CO) liaison
with Donna Rice (1987), and former House Ways and Means Committee Chairman
Wilbur Mills' (D-AR) involvement
with Fanne Foxe (1974). But there have also been numerous -- and more recent -- sex scandals involving Republicans. For
example:
- On September 29, 2006,
then-Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) resigned
after ABC News asked
him about sexually explicit instant messages to underage former
congressional pages. The messages, according to ABC News, were
"provided by former male pages who said the congressman, under the
AOL Instant Messenger screen name Maf54, made repeated references to
sexual organs and acts." The House Ethics Committee later decided not to take
any disciplinary action against members of the House leadership who had
known of emails sent by Foley to former pages, as these were found to be
not quite as explicit as the instant messages. One former page, however, described
those emails as "sick sick sick sick sick."
- In 1999, former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich's (R-GA) "long-term" affair with
congressional aide Callista Bisek -- whom he later married -- was revealed
while he was seeking a divorce from his second wife. In March 2007,
Gingrich confessed
to the affair.
- In December 1998, during
impeachment proceedings against Clinton
stemming from the Lewinsky affair, then-House Speaker-designate Bob
Livingston (R-LA) admitted
to having an extramarital affair. Two days later, Livingston
announced
he would not seek the speakership and that he would resign from the House
in mid-1999. He resigned in March 1999.
- In a November 22, 1992, article,
The Washington Post reported
that then-Sen. Robert Packwood (R-OR) had made numerous "uninvited sexual
advances to women who have worked for him or with him." Investigations
revealed
more incidents of sexual harassment and also exposed Packwood's
secret personal diaries. Packwood eventually resigned
from the Senate on October 1, 1995, after the Senate Ethics Committee voted unanimously to
expel him.
- In September 1998, Salon.com reported
that then-House Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde (R-IL) had engaged
in an extramarital affair with Cherie Snodgrass from 1965 to 1969.
According to Hyde, the affair ended when Snodgrass' husband, Fred,
told Hyde's wife about it. Hyde purported to explain the affair --
which came out amid the Lewinsky controversy -- as a "youthful
indiscretion," even though he was reportedly 41 when the affair started.
Hyde, as Judiciary Committee chairman, led the successful push to impeach Clinton.
Former Nixon White House Counsel John W. Dean has compiled a
list of congressional sex scandals.
From the 5
p.m. ET hour of the May 3 edition of The
Situation Room:
BLITZER: Washington, of course, no stranger to sex scandals. Here's a
look at some of the ones that grabbed headlines over the years.
Back in 1998, Bill Clinton, impeached after his affair
with the White House intern, Monica Lewinsky, became public; 1987, there was the
yacht, Monkey Business, picture
of Gary Hart on that boat with
Donna Rice, ended his run for the White House.
And back in 1974, many of you will
remember a powerful Democrat named Wilbur
Mills was caught with a stripper, Fanne Foxe. The relationship
became public after a cop pulled Mills' limo over late one night and Foxe tried
to flee by jumping into some nearby water [The Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C.].
He resigned as chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee. She continued
stripping.
&mdash R.S.K.
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