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Dems ramp up pressure on Conyers to step down

Former aide details sexual harassment complaint on TV

- By Cathleen Decker cathleen.decker@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — House Democratic leaders called on Rep. John Conyers to resign Thursday, increasing pressure on the veteran lawmaker to leave office amid multiple allegation­s that he sexually harassed female aides.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and her three deputies, including the House’s highestran­king African-American, Rep. James Clyburn, S.C., said Conyers, D-Mich., must step down, after one of his accusers detailed her experience on national television.

“Zero tolerance means consequenc­es for everyone,” Pelosi said at a news conference. “No matter how great the legacy, it is no license to harass or discrimina­te. In fact, it makes it even more disappoint­ing.”

Clyburn noted that Conyers, 88, had already stepped down as the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.

“I told Conyers several days ago that I thought it was in his best interest that he do the same for his constituen­ts that he did for his colleagues here,” he said.

Conyers, the longestser­ving member of Congress, is accused of mistreatin­g female aides over two decades, including alleged episodes of verbal abuse, inappropri­ate touching and sexual advances.

He has denied wrongdoing and said through his attorney Thursday that he has no plans to resign or retire from the House.

“It is not up to Nancy Pelosi. Nancy Pelosi did not elect the congressma­n, and she sure as hell won’t be the one to tell the congressma­n to leave,” attorney Arnold Reed told reporters outside the Conyers home in Detroit.

Still, calls for Conyers’ resignatio­n kept emerging, including from rank-andfile members of the House and the head of a liberal super PAC.

Priorities USA Chairman Guy Cecil tweeted that Conyers should resign, along with Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., who has been accused of inappropri­ately touching multiple women.

“This is not complicate­d,” Cecil tweeted Thursday. “Conyers should resign. Franken should resign ... Hypocrisy on the other side doesn’t justify hypocrisy on our side. Period.”

Both Franken and Conyers are under investigat­ion by congressio­nal ethics committees.

On Thursday, the Senate Ethics Committee confirmed that it has launched a preliminar­y inquiry into Franken’s behavior, and a handful of House Democrats — including Democratic Caucus Chairman Joseph Crowley, N.Y., — called for him to resign, along with Conyers.

Asked about such calls, Franken declined to comment.

After a fifth woman accused Franken on Thursday morning of inappropri­ate touching, his office said that Franken has never “intentiona­lly engaged in this kind of conduct.”

Reed suggested that Conyers deserves the same treatment from Democratic leaders as Franken, who has not come under equal pressure to resign.

Meanwhile, another congressma­n whose behavior has come under scrutiny said Thursday that he would not seek re-election.

“There are enough people who lost faith in me that it’s time to step aside,” said Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, who had shared explicit photos of himself with a woman.

The photos later circulated online.

Barton’s comments were reported by The Dallas Morning News.

Conyers has been hospitaliz­ed in the Detroit area for a stress-related illness, according to a family spokesman, who confirmed the news just as a woman who settled a sexual harassment complaint with him in 2015 identified herself publicly for the first time on national television.

In an interview with NBC’s “Today” show, former Conyers aide Marion Brown said Conyers touched her inappropri­ately and invited her to a Chicago hotel room to discuss business before propositio­ning her for sex.

“He asked me to satisfy him sexually,” Brown told NBC. “He pointed to areas of, genital areas of his body, and asked me to, you know, touch it. It was sexual harassment, violating my body, propositio­ning me for sex.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., also said that Conyers should step down, noting that he had heard Brown’s interview.

“I think he should resign. I think he should resign immediatel­y,” Ryan told reporters Thursday. “I’ve just been briefed on the torrent of allegation­s, and I think he should.”

The Congressio­nal Black Caucus has not called on Conyers to resign.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., has been hospitaliz­ed in the Detroit area for a stress-related illness, a family friend said. Congressio­nal leaders are calling on Conyers, 88, to resign.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., has been hospitaliz­ed in the Detroit area for a stress-related illness, a family friend said. Congressio­nal leaders are calling on Conyers, 88, to resign.

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