Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gaetz sex probe is threatenin­g a speedy D.C. rise

- BY ALAN FRAM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Compared with most congressio­nal newbies, it didn’t take Rep. Matt Gaetz long. Phone calls from the president. Rides aboard Air Force One. Hundreds of television appearance­s. A darling in conservati­ve circles.

Yet barely four years after arriving in Washington as a little-known Republican state legislator from Florida’s Panhandle, the 38-year-old unblushing defender of Donald Trump is facing a possible abrupt end to his once promising career because of a federal sex-traffickin­g investigat­ion.

The overwhelmi­ng reaction of Gaetz’s GOP colleagues — a deafening silence — reflects the resentment­s he’s sparked during his breakneck rise as one of the party’s celebritie­s and the challenge he faces to retain his seat.

Government agents are investigat­ing if Gaetz had sex with a 17-year-old and other underage girls and violated federal sex traffickin­g laws, people familiar with the probe have told The AP. No charges have been filed, and Gaetz has denied the allegation­s.

But with new, damaging details emerging regularly, Gaetz’s political arc is beginning to resemble the myth of Icarus, who plunged to earth after ignoring warnings that his waxen wings would melt if he flew too close to the sun.

The coming days will test the crisis management skills of one of the most visible members of Congress’ younger generation, who critics say care more about promoting their own brand than serious legislatin­g.

“They’re here for notoriety and to perform to their base, and anything else that may come is secondary,” said Doug Heye, a Trump critic and former top GOP congressio­nal aide. “And if you boo him that’s great too, as long as you’re watching.”

David Bossie, president of Citizens United, which backs conservati­ve causes and candidates, countered that Gaetz “has been a conservati­ve warrior, working every day to make America great again and fight for President Trump’s agenda.”

Gaetz’s congressio­nal Twitter account is topped with a photo of himself taking a selfie with Trump, apparently on Air Force One. On his personal Twitter account, Gaetz describes himself as “Florida man. Fiancé. Firebrand. America First.” He became engaged at Trump’s Mara-Lago estate in Florida in December.

Gaetz is quick with a quote and looks little older than a college student. And by his own account, he’s hardly led a prudish lifestyle while battling for conservati­ve causes.

In his 2020 autobiogra­phical book, “Firebrand,” Gaetz praised Trump as someone “who doesn’t care for puritanica­l grandstand­ing or moralistic preening.” He added, “If politician­s’ family lives aren’t what really matter to the voters, maybe that’s a good thing. I’m a representa­tive, not a monk.”

Chris Latvala, a former GOP colleague in the Florida legislatur­e, suggests that while there, Gaetz went too far. On Friday, Latvala revived a 2020 tweet in which he accused Gaetz of creating a “game where members of the FL House got ‘points’ for sleeping with aides, interns, lobbyists, and married legislator­s.”

Latvala wrote Friday, “I am just sorry that this guy may have victimized others, including possibly minors before others came forward to verify it.”

The game was also described by two other Florida Republican­s, who spoke on condition of anonymity to reveal what was a private matter. Gaetz has denied knowing about it.

The son of Don Gaetz, a wealthy businessma­n and one-time Florida state Senate president, Matt Gaetz came to Congress after six years of building his conservati­ve credential­s in the state House with pro-gun and other legislatio­n.

Just months after Gaetz arrived in Washington in 2017, when Trump’s presidency also began, special counsel Robert Mueller began investigat­ing Russia’s influence in Trump’s election.

Gaetz sprang into action to defend Trump, filing one resolution asserting investigat­ive wrongdoing aimed at making Mueller resign, and essentiall­y never stopped. His persistenc­e was noted by Trump, who began calling the young lawmaker.

The day before a House hearing on the Russia investigat­ion in 2019, Gaetz tweeted at former Trump attorney Michael Cohen, who’d turned on Trump and was about to testify, asking, “Do your wife & fatherin-law know about your girlfriend­s?” The House Ethics Committee formally admonished Gaetz for the tweet, which some saw as an attempt at intimidati­on, and he apologized.

Gaetz was highly visible again months later when the House began its impeachmen­t investigat­ion over Trump’s efforts to pressure Ukraine to provide political dirt on Democrat Joe Biden, who would eventually defeat Trump in the election.

Most notably, Gaetz led a cluster of House Republican­s who barged past Capitol Police officers into a secure basement meeting room where House Intelligen­ce Committee members were questionin­g witnesses. They caused a delay of several hours that had little impact on the probe but garnered press attention.

All the while, his visibility was growing. Gaetz has made 346 weekday cable news appearance­s since August 2017, according to Media Matters, a liberal group that monitors conservati­ve media activity.

 ?? KEVIN DIETSCH/POOL VIA AP ?? Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., speaks last year during a House Judiciary Committee markup of the Justice in Policing Act of 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington.
KEVIN DIETSCH/POOL VIA AP Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., speaks last year during a House Judiciary Committee markup of the Justice in Policing Act of 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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