Republican Senator Resigns After Sex Scandal Makes The Party Look “Hugely Hypocritical” – Video Added
Jun 17, 2009 14 Comments ›› Erik Wong
Bill Clinton got away with it…
WASHINGTON (AP) – Republican Sen. John Ensign of Nevada has stepped down from his leadership post one day after admitting he carried on an extramarital affair with a woman who was on his campaign staff.
Ensign conveyed his decision in a phone call with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, who said he had accepted the resignation. Ensign was chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, the fourth-ranking spot in the leadership.
He remained away from the Capitol during the day, and aides declined to answer additional questions about the affair.
Ensign, a rising star in conservative circles and Nevada’s most popular Republican, disclosed the affair at a hastily arranged news conference Tuesday, shattering his prospects for heading his party’s ticket three years from now.
“Last year I had an affair. I violated the vows of my marriage,” Ensign told reporters, refusing to take any questions. “It is the worst thing I have ever done in my life. If there was ever anything in my life that I could take back, this would be it.”
Ensign, 51, belongs to the men’s Christian ministry Promise Keepers, and has championed causes pushed by the Republican’s conservative religious base.
Earlier this month, he went to Iowa, home to the nation’s first presidential precinct caucuses, to speak as part of a conservative lecture series designed to define the Republican Party after its shattering defeat in last year’s elections. Aides said the visit was about staking out a leadership position within the Republican Party.
“This really doesn’t help a Republican Party that has tried to run as a party of family values,” said Chuck Muth, a self-described conservative-libertarian activist. “It absolutely makes the party look hugely hypocritical.”
Ensign did not disclose what prompted his decision to declare his infidelity.
Ensign’s spokesman, Tory Mazzola, said the affair took place between December 2007 and August 2008 with a campaign staffer who was married to an employee in Ensign’s Senate office.
In 2002, Ensign missed several public appearances and dropped official business for about two weeks to deal with what his aides then described as a family matter. A person familiar with that episode, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said Tuesday the absence followed an earlier affair.
Ensign’s admission complicates Republican Party efforts to unseat Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid, also from Nevada, in next year’s midterm congressional elections.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – In a new setback for the struggling Republican party, U.S. Senator John Ensign resigned from a party leadership post on Wednesday after admitting an affair with a female staffer.
“He’s accepted responsibility for his actions and apologized to his family and constituents. He offered, and I accepted, his resignation as chairman of the (Senate Republican) Policy Committee,” said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.
Ensign’s resignation causes another headache for the Republican Party, which preaches “family values” and has been scrambling to rebuild in wake of losing the last two congressional elections and the White House in 2008.
Ensign, of Nevada, led failed efforts by Republicans to pick up seats in last year’s Senate elections, which left Democrats in control of the chamber with 59 of the 99 filled Senate seats.
As chairman of the Policy Committee charged with analyzing pending legislation, Ensign held the fourth ranking post in Senate Republican leadership.
Ensign, 51, who is married and had been seen as a potential 2012 presidential contender, admitted he had an affair last year with a staffer whose husband also worked for him. The couple no longer work for the senator.
If Ensign decides to seek a third six-year term in the Senate, he would be up for election in 2012.











