The Palm Beach Post

Conyers to leave House panel amid harassment probe

Michigan Democrat who paid off ex-staffer rejects calls to resign.

- By Paul Kane Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., the longestser­ving member of Congress, stepped aside as the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee amid growing internal pressure as an ethics investigat­ion begins into sexual harassment allegation­s.

Conyers, 88, said he would not resign from Congress and instead would fight the allegation­s in the hope of reclaiming his spot atop the committee overseeing federal laws and other legal issues. “I very much look forward to vindicatin­g myself and my family before the House Committee on Ethics,” he wrote Sunday in a letter to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Conyers settled a sexual harassment allegation brought by a former staffer, leaving her on the payroll as a temporary employee and paying out just under $30,000.

Pelosi issued a statement immediatel­y after Conyers’ announceme­nt: “I particular­ly take any accusation of sexual harassment very seriously. Any credible accusation must be reviewed by the

Ethics Committee expedi- tiously. We are at a watershed moment on this issue.”

The announceme­nt came after days of internal pressure on Conyers, particular­ly from Pelosi, to step aside from the leadership post, according to a senior Democratic aide familiar with the process.

It followed a Sunday morning dominated by the sprawl- ing issue of sexual harassment and assault on the political news shows. Ini- tially, on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Pelosi declined to say whether Conyers would suffer any immediate penalty over allegation­s that he sexually harassed a junior female aide in a case that was resolved with a payout.

“We are strengthen­ed by due process. Just because someone is accused — and was it one accusation? Is it two? I think there has to be — John Conyers is an icon in our country,” Pelosi told NBC’s Chuck Todd, when asked whether the longest-serving member of the House should resign.

However, in a sign that she knew what was coming, Pelosi said she expected Conyers to take a step himself. “I believe he under- stands what is at stake here and he will do the right thing,” she said.

But members of Congress have said that the “due process” system is outdated and biased toward insulating the lawmaker from suffering penalties for misbehavio­r. “The whole system needs to have a comprehens­ive shift,” Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Speier and Rep. Barbara Comstock, R-Va., are the lead sponsors of legislatio­n scheduled for a vote this week that would streamline the process, amid growing accusation­s and revelation­s about members of Congress that are similar to those involv- ing powerful men from Hollywood, the media and Sili- con Valley.

The legislat i on would require mandatory training on harassment and discrimina­tion for all lawmak- ers, staff and interns who work in Congress.

“There needs to be one standard for members,” Comstock said on “This Week,” noting that Conyers benefited from making a payment that was never revealed until a BuzzFeed report last week. “No more secret payments.”

Conyers has denied any wrongdoing and said his payout was meant to resolve the issue and did not constitute an admission of culpabilit­y.

His payout came from the regular allowance for lawmakers for staff salaries and other administra­tive costs. As The Washington Post reported this month, a separate account overseen by the Office of Compliance has paid out more than $15 million in settlement­s of sexual harassment and other cases of discrimina­tion.

One Democrat, Rep. Kathleen Rice of New York, has suggested that Conyers should just resign from Congress altogether, something that Comstock voiced agreement with Sunday, citing how swiftly some high-profile media titans have fallen.

“We have to have the same kind of standards,” she said.

Speier, however, said the House Ethics Committee should add staff to handle the Conyers case “very swiftly” to determine the severity of the allegation­s. “If they’re accurate, I do believe that Congressma­n Conyers should step down,” she said.

Pelosi also suggested that Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., was in a different place amid allegation­s against him, in part because one of his alleged victims has publicly accepted his apology. Franken was accused of forcibly kissing an entertaine­r on a 2006 USO tour before he joined the Senate, and since then several other women have suggested Franken groped them while posing for pictures.

“I don’t think that you can equate Senator Franken with Roy Moore. It’s two different things,” she said, contrastin­g the severity of allegation­s against Franken with those against the Republican Senate candidate in Alabama.

 ??  ?? Rep. John Conyers was the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.
Rep. John Conyers was the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.

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