Houston Chronicle

Franken apologizes, sees long fight for trust

Senator makes first appearance since allegation­s unveiled

- By Alan Fram and Juliet Linderman

WASHINGTON — Sen. Al Franken apologized Monday to “everyone who has counted on me to be a champion for women” as the Minnesota Democrat fought to bolster his support with his first Capitol public appearance since being drawn into a wave of sexual harassment accusation­s buffeting Congress.

Franken spoke as lawmakers began returning from an extraordin­ary weeklong Thanksgivi­ng break that saw sexually tinged problems engulf two other legislator­s as well: Reps. John Conyers, D-Mich., and Joe Barton, RTexas. Those revelation­s were on top of allegation­s that Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl and sought romantic relationsh­ips with other teenagers when he was in his 30s four decades ago, which he has denied.

Will cooperate with probe

With harassment charges bringing down big names in the worlds of entertainm­ent and journalism, Congress was adding widespread complaints about how it handles such incidents to its pile of year-end work.

In a brief appearance before reporters, Franken stopped short of specifying how his memory differs from four women’s accounts of separate incidents in which he allegedly initiated improper sexual contact. He said he recalls “differentl­y” one woman’s allegation that he forcibly kissed her but provided no detail, and said he doesn’t remember three other times women assert he grabbed their buttocks, citing “tens of thousands” of people he meets annually.

“But I feel that you have to respect, you know, women’s experience,” he said.

Franken said he’ll cooperate with an Ethics Committee investigat­ion of his behavior. He said it will take “a long time for me to regain people’s trust” and said he hoped to begin that process by returning to work.

“I want to be someone who adds something to this conversati­on,” said Franken, a longtime liberal.

The House planned to vote Wednesday on a resolution requiring lawmakers and staff to annually complete anti-harassment training. Its chief sponsors included Reps. Barbara Comstock, R-Va., and Jackie Speier, D-Calif., who has said she was sexually assaulted by a male chief of staff as a House aide decades ago. The Senate approved a similar measure this month.

With many lawmakers — particular­ly women — pushing for more, the House Administra­tion Committee planned a hearing next week on how to strengthen Congress’ processing of harassment allegation­s. Under the 1995 Congressio­nal Accountabi­lity Act, complaints have been sent to an obscure Office of Compliance, which requires a lengthy counseling and mediation period and has allowed virtually no public disclosure of cases.

Rep. Gregg Harper, R-Miss., said the hearing will consider “ways to create a respectful reporting and settlement process” and said he expected legislatio­n by early 2018.

Taxpayer money used

Congress’ procedures drew intensifie­d fire after a report last week by the news website BuzzFeed that Conyers’ office paid a woman more than $27,000 under a confidenti­ality agreement to settle a complaint in 2015 that she was fired from his Washington staff because she rejected his sexual advances. The money came from taxpayers, not Conyers himself.

Conyers, 88, the House’s current longest-serving member, has relinquish­ed his post as top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, and the House Ethics Committee is reviewing the case. He’s denied the allegation­s.

Late Monday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she’d met with a woman who described “unacceptab­le and disappoint­ing” treatment from Conyers when she worked for the Judiciary panel in the 1990s. Melanie Sloan, an attorney, told the Washington Post last week that Conyers criticized her appearance and once attended a meeting in his underwear, but said she didn’t feel sexually harassed.

Conyers’ counsel has denied Sloan’s allegation. Pelosi said she believes Sloan and said the “ridiculous system” of secret settlement­s must be ended so accusers can speak to the ethics committee.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? In his apology for alleged sexual harassment on Monday, Sen. Al Franken said, “I want to be someone who adds something to this conversati­on.”
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press In his apology for alleged sexual harassment on Monday, Sen. Al Franken said, “I want to be someone who adds something to this conversati­on.”

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