Las Vegas Review-Journal

Moms for Liberty co-founder had sex with a woman but targets gay people?

- Fabiola Santiago Fabiola Santiago is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

Wouldn’t it be ironic if the woman who led an ultra-conservati­ve movement that sought to put gays back in the closet was having a long-term, three-way bisexual relationsh­ip with a lover she shared with her husband, Florida’s GOP chairman?

That’s the allegation being made about Bridget Ziegler — co-founder of far-right Moms for Liberty — by an unnamed woman accusing Florida Republican Chairman Christian Ziegler of rape and sexual battery.

Hypocrisy on steroids, if true. The crusading ideologue — who demanded private Christian school-style mores in public schools, from grades K-12, when high school students are either close to or already adults — is now facing the ultimate scrutiny of her sex life.

Christian Ziegler, according to a laboriousl­y redacted Sarasota, Fla., police report released to media Thursday after the Florida Trident, a watchdog news outlet, broke the news, is under an “active criminal investigat­ion.”

He’s accused of going to the woman’s house without Bridget on Oct. 2 and raping her, according to the police and media reports citing law enforcemen­t sources.

His wife isn’t facing any charges.

But, in the context of the investigat­ion, the woman revealed to the police officer who initially responded and the investigat­ing detective her long-running “three-way” sex life with the couple.

Christian Ziegler’s lawyer vehemently denied the charges made against the brash party boss, who vowed earlier this year: “Until we get every Democrat out of office and no Democrat considers running for office, we’re going to continue to step on the gas and move forward in Florida.”

The Zieglers were considered a quickly rising power couple — close collaborat­ors of Florida Gov. Ron Desantis and also supporters of ex-president Donald Trump.

But while he talked tough and boisterous­ly, she seemed to be the real the mover and shaker.

The group she co-founded in the name of “parental rights” — credited with banning school books featuring gay characters and Blacks confrontin­g discrimina­tion in a predominan­tly white society — has spread nationwide at a vertiginou­s rate: 300 chapters in 48 states in two years.

Even in liberal California, the misnamed Moms for Liberty and supporters attempted to purge a social studies textbook that contained a biography of legendary San Francisco gay-rights leader Harvey Milk.

“We are fighting for the survival of America,” the group claims in its literature.

Such loyalty to an agenda that’s also the governor’s has been generously rewarded.

Desantis not only endorsed Bridget Ziegler’s school board candidacy, but he gave her a seat on the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District Board of Supervisor­s.

This is the agency formed after the dispute with Disney World over its corporate criticism of the “Don’t Say Gay” law banning sexual-identity discussion in schools and following the terminatio­n of Disney’s Reedy Creek special taxing district operationa­l agreement with the state.

Now that a woman’s allegation­s include the claim that sex tapes were made, the Zieglers are being dubbed “a throuple.”

Group sex and swinging as a lifestyle might be nonpartisa­n. But Democrats don’t pretend to hate gays — legislate against them to score political points — while secretly inviting them to join the marital party.

There’s national history on the topic of self-righteous conservati­ves — priests, pastors, politician­s — who, while preaching repression, act in an questionab­le manner.

Newt Gingrich, former Republican U.S. House speaker and presidenti­al candidate, comes to mind.

He led the effort to impeach Democrat Bill Clinton over the Monica Lewinsky affair and insisted on calling him “a sexual predator.”

Gingrich’s moral high ground crumbled from underneath him when it was revealed that he had been having a six-year affair with another congressma­n’s employee while married to his second wife.

But, no need to go that far back, not with no-shame Trump insisting he’s worthy of another term after almost derailing American democracy and now promising to run the country with a dictator’s iron fist.

Accused by 26 women of sexual misconduct — and, earlier this year, found liable in a civil trial of sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in 1996 — he’s the epitome of moral corruption. During the presidenti­al campaign in 2016, he paid stripper Stormy Daniels hush money to lie about his extramarit­al affair with her while his wife Melania was pregnant.

So why wouldn’t other Republican­s feel emboldened to let loose?

No matter how low Trump falls on the morality scale, he’s still the almost locked-in front-runner — further proof of the low bar Republican­s set for themselves.

If the allegation­s are true, then the Zieglers are in good company.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States