Houston Chronicle

Farenthold will not finish rest of term

Corpus Christi congressma­n steps down abruptly amid allegation­s of harassment

- By Matthew Daly and Will Weissert

Texas Republican Rep. Blake Farenthold abruptly resigned Friday, four months after announcing he wouldn't seek reelection amid sexual harassment allegation­s.

“While I planned on serving out the remainder of my term in Congress, I know in my heart it's time for me to move along and look for new ways to serve,” Farenthold said in a video statement, adding that his action was effective as of 5 p.m.

In December, Farenthold had posted another video denying a former aide's 2014 accusation­s, including that he'd subjected her to sexually suggestive comments and behavior and then fired her after she complained. Still, the congressma­n apologized in that video for an office atmosphere he said included “destructiv­e gossip, offhand comments, offcolor jokes and behavior that, in general, was less than profession­al.” Capitol Hill has found itself in the center of a national reckoning over sexual misconduct and gender discrimina­tion in the workplace. Since October, eight lawmakers have either resigned or abandoned re-election bids amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct. Some members and aides have complained about a patchwork system for reporting offenses and secrecy around settlement­s paid by lawmakers' offices.

A ninth lawmaker, Rep. Elizabeth Esty, announced on Monday she will not seek reelection this year amid calls for her resignatio­n over her han-

dling of the firing of a former chief of staff accused of harassment, threats and violence against female staffers in her congressio­nal office.

Esty, a Democrat from Connecticu­t and an outspoken #MeToo advocate, made the announceme­nt not to seek a fourth term in the November election days after apologizin­g for not protecting her employees from the male ex-chief of staff.

The lawsuit by former Farenthold aide Lauren Greene alleged that the congressma­n had discussed his sexual fantasies about her and said at a staff meeting that a lobbyist had propositio­ned him for a threesome. It accused Farenthold of repeatedly compliment­ing her appearance, then joking that he hoped the comments wouldn't be construed as sexual harassment.

Farenthold, a seven-year House veteran from Corpus Christi, had said he'd engaged in no wrongdoing when he settled the case in 2015. But after congressio­nal sources said he'd paid the $84,000 settlement using taxpayer money, public focus intensifie­d.

Farenthold has promised to reimburse the Treasury Department for the cost of the settlement but hasn't done so yet.

In an ominous sign for Farenthold, the head of the House GOP's campaign committee said in a statement Friday that he hopes Farenthold is “true to his word and pays back the $84,000 of taxpayer money he used as a settlement.”

Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio, the GOP campaign chief, added that “Congress must hold ourselves to a higher standard and regain the trust of the American people.”

Two Republican­s, former Texas Water Developmen­t Board official Bech Bruun and ex-Victoria County Republican Party Chairman Michael Cloud, are squaring off in a May 22 primary runoff to succeed him.

A businessma­n and self-described radio sidekick who was new to politics, Farenthold upset long-serving Democratic U.S. Rep. Solomon Ortiz during the tea party wave of 2010. But his district has since been redrawn to make it more reliably Republican — including removing many areas along the Texas-Mexico border that had favored Democrats.

In Friday's video, Farenthold thanked his staff for its hard work and his family for its support while saying: “Leaving my service in the House, I'm able to look back on the entirety of my career in public service and say it was well worthwhile.”

“I look forward to staying in touch with everyone,” Farenthold said. “It's been an honor and a privilege to serve.”

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