USA TODAY US Edition

Congress reels from resignatio­ns

Harassment allegation­s force lawmakers out

- Fredreka Schouten and Heidi M. Przybyla USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – The national reckoning over sexual harassment swept through Congress on Thursday as Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., and Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., announced plans to resign over sexual misconduct allegation­s.

The House Ethics Committee an- nounced an investigat­ion into another lawmaker, Rep. Blake Farenthold, RTexas, over his use of taxpayer dollars to pay an $84,000 sexual harassment settlement to a former aide.

Thursday’s resignatio­ns — of a liberal Democrat and a Tea Party-aligned Republican — reflect the rapid pace of powerful men being held to account for alleged sexual misconduct in the months after dozens of women accused Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of sexual abuse.

Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., facing sexual harassment claims, stepped down Tuesday from the House seat he held for more than five decades.

Thursday, Franken, a two-term senator and former Saturday Night Live star, announced his plans to resign after more than a half-dozen women came forward over the past several weeks with allegation­s that he touched them improperly or made unwanted sexual advances.

In an emotional speech from the Senate floor, Franken disputed some of the accusation­s and suggested he was being held to a different standard than President Trump.

“I, of all people, am aware that there is some irony in the fact that I am leaving while a man who has bragged on tape about his history of sexual assault sits in the Oval Office and a man who has repeatedly preyed on young girls campaigns for the Senate with the full support of his party,” Franken said, referring to Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore. Moore has been accused of having inappropri­ate sexual contact with teenage girls when he was in his 30s; Moore denied any wrongdoing.

Hours after Franken’s announceme­nt, Franks, an eight-term Arizona Republican, said he would resign after the House Ethics Committee announced it opened an investigat­ion into sexual harassment allegation­s.

Franks said he had discussion­s “of surrogacy” with two of his “previous female subordinat­es” as he and his wife sought to have a third child. A surrogate delivered Franks’ two older children.

“I deeply regret that my discussion of this option and process in the work- place caused distress,” he wrote. He said he planned to leave Congress on Jan. 31.

Franks said he feared he would not receive a fair ethics investigat­ion “before distorted and sensationa­lized versions of this story would put me, my family, my staff and my noble colleagues in the House of Representa­tives through a hyperboliz­ed public excoriatio­n.”

In a statement, the office of House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said he told Franks to resign last week after confrontin­g him with “credible claims” of misconduct and told Franks he would forward the case to the ethics panel.

Ryan’s office said the complaint was lodged with the ethics committee last Friday, and Ryan accepted Franks’ letter of resignatio­n Thursday. “The speaker takes seriously his obligation to ensure a safe workplace in the House,” the statement read.

“It is extraordin­ary that the story that started about a movie producer has hit Capitol Hill in a big way, from investigat­ion to involuntar­y resignatio­ns; and this is just the start of it,” Julian Zelizer, American political history professor at Princeton University, told USA TODAY on Thursday evening.

“It’s unclear where this all goes,” he said. “If this doesn’t ultimately turn into a story about changing the rules … we’ll be here again in 10 years. But all of this is very unsettling right now, particular­ly with Roy Moore’s election looming over the horizon.”

A bill pending in Congress would require members of Congress to settle sexual harassment claims with their own money, and the existence of the settlement would be made public.

Under the current rules, taxpayers pay the settlement­s, and victims are generally barred from discussing the cases.

The House Ethics Committee announced late Thursday that it was establishi­ng an investigat­ive subcommitt­ee into Farenthold’s conduct and his taxpayer-funded settlement to a former aide, Lauren Greene.

In 2015, the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics investigat­ed Greene’s allegation­s. It told the House Ethics Committee that it “did not find substantia­l reason to believe that Representa­tive Farenthold engaged in the alleged conduct.” The committee has decided to reopen the case.

 ??  ?? Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., leaves the Capitol on Thursday after announcing on the Senate floor that he would step down. JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP
Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., leaves the Capitol on Thursday after announcing on the Senate floor that he would step down. JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP

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