Yuma Sun

U.S. Rep. Esty won’t seek re-election amid harassment queries

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HARTFORD, Conn. — U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty announced on Monday she will not seek re-election this year amid calls for her resignatio­n over her handling 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.

Since her Friday apology, which came after two news organizati­ons published articles about her handling of the matter, a growing number of fellow Democrats, including the top two in the Connecticu­t Senate, had urged her to resign.

The congresswo­man, who insisted last week she would not resign, said Monday she deter- mined “it is in the best interest of my constituen­ts and my family to end my time in Congress at the end of this year and not seek re-election.” She added how “too many women” have been harmed by workplace harassment.

“In the terrible situation in my office, I could have and should have done better,” she said in a statement.

Esty’s announceme­nt came hours after she asked the House Ethics Committee to review her actions to determine if there was any wrongdoing on her part.

Esty has said she regrets not moving along an internal investigat­ion into the 2016 allegation­s against Tony Baker, which revealed more widespread allegation­s of abuse, and regrets providing “even the slightest assistance to this individual as he sought a new job.”

A spokesman for Baker told Hearst Connecticu­t Media and the Washington Post that he denies some of the allegation­s. A phone number listed for a Tony Baker in Columbus, Ohio, where the spokesman said the former chief of staff was living, was disconnect­ed.

The 58-year-old Esty was a former member of her local town council in Cheshire and a oneterm state representa­tive in the state’s General Assembly before winning her first term in Congress representi­ng the 5th District in 2012. A graduate of Harvard University in 1981, she earned her law degree from Yale Law School in 1985.

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