Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot: I was ‘sexually harassed in a workplace’

Expresses sympathy for Cuomo accusers

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Acknowledg­ing she, too, has been “sexually harassed in a workplace setting,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday sympathize­d with three women who have come forward to accuse New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment.

The mayor didn’t say when she was sexually harassed in the workplace or by whom. Nor did she say what job she held at the time or whether she filed a complaint against her alleged harasser.

Top aides offered no further details on the mayor’s remarks.

Lightfoot simply used her personal experience to explain why she feels a personal connection to three women who have accused Cuomo of sexual harassment and why she believes this “Me, too” moment cannot be ignored.

“Every woman who has been sexually harassed in a workplace setting, as I have been, understand­s how difficult it is for a woman to come forward and to speak her truth,” the mayor said.

“We are way past time in this country where any kind of behavior that looks like that should be acceptable. Part of the challenge is that while we have opened up opportunit­ies for women in the workplace, we’ve opened up opportunit­ies in institutio­ns made by and for men. This provides us with another opportunit­y to really rethink what our institutio­nal culture and structures are.”

In 2017, sexual harassment allegation­s against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein triggered a “Me, Too” avalanche of allegation­s against men in acting, the media, the restaurant industry and politics. Nearly four years later, Lightfoot said no woman should have to worry about anything in the workplace other than doing a “good job.” And doing a good job “shouldn’t be measured by her perceived beauty or lack thereof ” by a man in the workplace and certainly not by “somebody who holds the kind of power the governor does,” the mayor said.

Three women, all former Cuomo aides, have now come forward to accuse him of sexual harassment.

Cuomo has denied the allegation­s. But in an extraordin­ary statement released Sunday, the governor acknowledg­ed that some of his past behavior in the workplace may “have been misinterpr­eted as an unwanted flirtation . . . . To be clear, I never inappropri­ately touched anybody and I never propositio­ned anybody and I never intended to make anyone feel uncomforta­ble.”

Lightfoot said Cuomo’s statement “sounds like a recognitio­n on his part that he said and did some things that were inappropri­ate.”

“The fact that one of the young women immediatel­y made a report to the chief of staff, a woman, and to the special counsel, also a woman, and that the solution was to move her to another job — I think that raises some serious questions,” the mayor said.

“Young women in the workplace should just be able to go do their job and not have to worry about having to be put into the kind of uncomforta­ble circumstan­ce that way too many women, myself included, have experience­d in the workplace. It just shouldn’t happen.”

Lightfoot laughed when she was asked whether Cuomo deserves to be reelected, saying it’s up to New York voters to decide — after New York’s female attorney general conducts her investigat­ion of the alleged harassment in Cuomo’s office.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot said her personal workplace experience­s help her feel a personal connection to women who have accused New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE Mayor Lori Lightfoot said her personal workplace experience­s help her feel a personal connection to women who have accused New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment.
 ??  ?? Gov. Andrew Cuomo
Gov. Andrew Cuomo

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