Orlando Sentinel

Latvala should signal culture change.

- South Fla. Sun Sentinel

Florida Sen. Jack Latvala created a hostile workplace for women in the Florida Capitol. He violated his oath to conduct himself with integrity and uphold the public’s trust. It’s also possible he violated the public corruption law by trading his vote for sexual favors.

After reading the report of a retired judge who investigat­ed the sexual harassment complaint against Latvala, it came as a great relief Wednesday to hear the senator had chosen to resign rather than force his state, his family and his victims to endure a salacious trial before the Florida Senate.

Latvala continues to claim the original charges are fabricatio­ns, but the special master didn’t buy it, except for one count.

The totality of the report by Judge Ronald Swanson makes the senator’s protestati­ons unpersuasi­ve.

In his resignatio­n letter, Latvala, 66, said he saw himself as a champion of women, “but perhaps I haven’t kept up with political correctnes­s in my comments as well as I should have.”

We beg to differ. This isn’t a case of political correctnes­s run amok. This is a case of an old-school guy who comes from a generation of men that has taken advantage of their positions of power over women and failed to change their behaviors as times changed.

The Latvala report reads like a 1960s bodice-ripper without the romance. There’s talk of women wearing skirts, or afraid to wear skirts, or being asked to wear pearls and nothing else. In the afternoon, liquor is served in the Senate’s leadership office, which leads to nothing good. And there’s hugs that last too long, hands that rove where they don’t belong, and eyes that roam over a woman’s body, accompanie­d by a sexually sounding “mmmm.”

The most damning revelation came not from the original complainan­t, Rachel Perrin Rogers, a smart and talented legislativ­e aide who said Latvala subjected her to “inappropri­ate and unwanted” verbal and physical contact over the course of four years. After talking to 19 people and examining the evidence, retired Judge Ronald Swanson believed Rogers had indeed been harassed by the powerful chairman of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

No, the most horrific story came from an unidentifi­ed woman, formerly a lobbyist, who’d known Latvala since 1995 and had a relationsh­ip with him that was sometimes intimate. She thought that would change when the senator became engaged to his current wife. But it didn’t.

According to the report, the woman “testified that between 2015 and 2017, Sen. Latvala touched and groped her in an unwelcome manner every time she went to his office . ... ”

Most damning of all, she said Latvala said he would support her issues if she would let him touch her. Text messages purportedl­y sent by Latvala back her up, the report says . ...

Sure, some women may welcome a powerful senator’s advances, or consider his attention playful or fun . ...

But other women take inappropri­ate comments in a different way. And there’s no room for error anymore. People in power need to be careful about what they say, especially to people in positions of lesser power . ...

Lawmakers must avoid the trap of believing the people who flatter them, and laugh at their jokes, and contribute to their political committees are their friends. Or that they have permission to flirt, make off-color jokes or grope them . ...

Lawmakers go to Tallahasse­e to do the people’s business, not monkey business. If legislator­s are distracted by complaints or compromise­d by rumors, they’re less able to be effective at representi­ng us.

So let this affair not end with Latvala’s resignatio­n. Let it lead to a cultural reboot at the Capitol.

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