Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Franken denounces GOP in final speech

- ELISE VIEBECK

WASHINGTON — Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., bade farewell to Capitol Hill on Thursday with a lengthy broadside against the policies of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and a call for politician­s to commit themselves to “honesty in public discourse.”

Franken, who will resign his seat Jan. 2 over more than a half-dozen allegation­s that he touched women inappropri­ately, lamented what he described as the degradatio­n of truth in the national political debate and the hyperparti­san environmen­t this has produced.

“As I leave the Senate, I have to admit that it feels like we’re losing the war for truth,” Franken said in his final speech on the Senate floor. “Maybe it’s already lost. If that’s what happens, then we have lost the ability to have the kinds of arguments that help build consensus.”

Franken will be replaced by Minnesota Lt. Gov. Tina Smith, a Democrat who is scheduled to be sworn in Jan. 3.

As Republican­s celebrated the passage of their tax plan in another part of the Capitol, Franken denounced the bill as a means of “showering corporatio­ns and wealthy donors with tax breaks and special favors.”

“The Republican tax bill represents a slap in the face to those forgotten men and women” mentioned by Trump during the 2016 campaign, he said. “I guess the president forgot about them.”

Franken is one of seven lawmakers who have resigned or decided not to run for re-election over allegation­s of sexual misconduct or harassment in the past three months.

His departure is a symbol of the wider reckoning taking place over sexual misbehavio­r among powerful men and the power of women’s allegation­s in the wake of the #MeToo campaign to raise awareness about sexual harassment.

In recent days, at least two of Franken’s Democratic colleagues — Sens. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Patrick Leahy of Vermont — had said he should withdraw his resignatio­n to wait for the result of an ethics investigat­ion into his behavior. In Minnesota, former Gov. Arne Carlson, a Republican, said the same, arguing that Franken was the victim of a “rush to judgment.”

On Thursday, Franken’s speech was followed by warm tribute from colleagues who praised his legacy and said they were sad to see him go.

“I’m sorry that he’s leaving under these circumstan­ces,” said Senate Minority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill. “Everyone who has ever lived has had moments they wish they could erase. … We all draw strength from the healing power of redemption, and we can take heart in the knowledge that tomorrow is another day.”

Franken, 65, joined the Senate in July 2009 and worked hard to distance himself from his prior career as a comedian. Cultivatin­g a reputation as a serious legislator, he emerged as a powerful voice against corporate interests in politics and one of the Democrats’ most pointed critics of Trump.

Last month, a woman said Franken had grabbed her breasts while she was sleeping and forcibly kissed her in 2006. That woman, Leeann Tweeden, was followed by many others who alleged sexual misconduct by Franken.

The drumbeat of allegation­s proved to be too much. On Dec. 6, a wave of Senate Democrats called for Franken to step aside, and the next day, he said he would resign in the coming weeks.

Franken, who apologized in the face of some of the accusation­s, was defiant as he made his announceme­nt. He has denied some allegation­s while saying he remembered other situations differentl­y from his accusers. He also sought to turn the tables on Trump, who faces arguably more serious allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

“There is some irony in the fact that I am leaving while a man who has bragged on tape about his history of sexual assault sits in the Oval Office,” Franken said in his Dec. 7 speech.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Paul Kane and Karen Tumulty of

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