Showing posts with label Weiner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weiner. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Does de Blasio have Weiner to thank?


As New York Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio prepares to take office in a few days, a panel on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday debated whether he has fellow Democrat Anthony Weiner to thank for his victory.


“I believe you could argue we have Bill de Blasio as the mayor because of Anthony Weiner,” said conservative commentator S.E. Cupp. “He really sucked a lot of oxygen out of Christine Quinn’s race and allowed Bill de Blasio to come up.”


The president of the liberal Center for American Progress disagreed.


“Yeah, he took momentum, but he took momentum from everybody,” Neera Tanden said. “I don’t think he had a political effect. I think he just took a huge amount of attention and moved away.”


Weiner’s mayoral bid was an attempted comeback from the explicit-photo scandal that forced him to resign from Congress in 2011. With new revelations this year, he ultimately took just 5 percent of the vote in the Democratic mayoral primary.


Meanwhile, de Blasio managed to knock off onetime frontrunner Quinn, the Democratic city council speaker and ally of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and went on to a landslide win in the general election.


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POLITICO – TOP Stories



Does de Blasio have Weiner to thank?

Friday, December 27, 2013

Weiner Hints He May Be Considering Another Political Run

Scandal-scarred ex-Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner says he may just give politics another go-around.

Writing on a Facebook page still carrying the banner “Weiner For Mayor,” New York’s former representative asked — and answered, in a veiled way — “What’s next?”


“I’ll keep you posted on my plans. But I hope we keep the band together,” wrote Weiner, whose mayoral run collapsed last summer when the married candidate confessed his online sexting didn’t end with the congressional resignation that was forced by the very same online behavior.


“You have been an amazing resource and the network we have all become part of has helped lead the debate on national health care, the need for a smarter and more compassionate approach to the growing pockets of need in our nation, and we all have sought to make the argument that too often we progressives come to knife fights carrying library books,” he wrote.


Weiner — whose latest lewd online foray included use of the cringe-worthy handle “Carlos Danger” — finished fifth in the Democratic mayoral primary, with less than 5 percent of the vote.


Meanwhile, his wife, Huma Abedin, returned to her job as a top adviser to Hillary Clinton.


The disgraced former politician also writes about his regret — and offered another round of apologies to supporters.


“I look forward to a better 2014,” he wrote, saying he wanted “to take stock a bit of 2013.”


“It certainly didn’t go as I had hoped. I continue to be deeply sorry that my personal mistakes undermined an amazing campaign that included too many amazing staffers to mention and hundreds of volunteers and many of you who kept active from afar with ideas, contributions and encouraging notes.”


“…Our team has to be a font of ideas and debate,” he said of fellow Democrats. “I tried to run my campaign on this theme and the response was amazing. (Who knows, maybe I have a third book of ideas in me!)”


Related Stories:


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – Politics



Weiner Hints He May Be Considering Another Political Run

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Hannity And Anthony Weiner Clash Over Weiner"s MSNBC Aspirations


Former congressman and failed New York City mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner went on Hannity Wednesday night in an attempt to discuss his future plans and the ongoing debt ceiling battle in Washington, but within a few minutes, the conversation became totally derailed.


Near the end of the clip, after such classic lines as, “I get to do questions! What am I? A potted plant?” and, “Do I hate you? No!” Hannity seems to come to an epiphany about why Weiner agreed to come on the show.


“You’re auditioning for MSNBC. You’re auditioning! You want Chris Matthews’s job. I can tell! You want to ask the questions. You wanna be Chris Matthews. You never shut up like Chris Matthews either,” he jokes.


“Fox apparently has much lower standards. I’d much rather have a job on Fox,” Weiner hits back.


“Oh, ouch. Ooh. You want me to talk about low standards? You really wanna go there?” Hannity finishes.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Hannity And Anthony Weiner Clash Over Weiner"s MSNBC Aspirations

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

AN ESCAPE HATCH FOR OBAMA ON SYRIA? – Obama heads to the Hill – Issa to Cantor: Let"s vote again on Amash amdt. – O"Donnell to Weiner on primary eve: What"s wrong with you? - trivia


By Scott Wong (swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


SYRIA ESCAPE HATCH? OBAMA’S ACCIDENTAL DIPLOMACY – POLITICO’s Josh Gerstein has the latest developments on Syria: “President Barack Obama has stumbled into a possible resolution of the Syria showdown, after an act of apparently accidental U.S. diplomacy seemed to deliver a potential way to wriggle out of his political predicament. Secretary of State John Kerry suggested at a London news conference Monday morning that the crisis could be defused if Syrian President Bashar Assad surrendered his chemical weapons to an international force. The Russians jumped on the idea and Monday evening Obama was sounding open to the proposal.


‘This could potentially be a significant breakthrough,’ Obama told NBC. ‘But we have to be skeptical because this is not how we’ve seen them operate over the last couple of years.’


– “With members of Congress clamoring for a chance to avoid a vote to authorize military action, the idea has a certain undeniable political convenience for the administration because it could avert the possibility of a political loss that could damage Obama’s reputation and to the U.S.’s global standing. The fast-moving developments meant the only thing that seemed certain Monday was that giving the diplomats time to work the issue could forestall an American strike and make it difficult for the White House to demand lawmakers take a tough vote to approve military action against Syria. … But in his round of interviews with network TV anchors Monday, Obama seemed eager to turn the lemons into lemonade, casting the development as a combination of his threat to use force and his own personal engagement with Russian President Vladimir Putin.” http://politi.co/15NYZBB


BREAKING … AP: “Syria says it has accepted Russia’s proposal to place its chemical weapons under international control for subsequent dismantling. Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said Tuesday after meeting with Russian parliament speaker that his government quickly agreed to the Russian initiative to ‘derail the U.S. aggression.’ Meanwhile, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that Russia is now working with Syria to prepare a detailed plan of action, which will be presented shortly. Lavrov said that Russia will then be ready to finalize the plan together with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.” http://bit.ly/15MQwZm


WAS A SYRIAN-RUSSIAN DEAL in the works before Kerry’s off-the-cuff remarks? Joshua Keating in Slate: “Obama … suggested that he had discussed such a proposal–or something similar to it–during the two leader’s brief meeting at last week’s G-20 summit. (Remember, plans for a full one-on-one between the two leaders were scuttled following the Edward Snowden affair.) … [A] lot of folks are also giving a second look today to a Haaretz article from Sept. 1 – little noticed at the time – in which journalist veteran Israeli journalist Barak Ravid suggested a potential deal was in the works that sounds very much like the one being discussed today.” http://slate.me/16g1NEI


FRONT-PAGE HEADLINES – NYT 2-col. lead: “OBAMA BACKS IDEA FOR SYRIA TO CEDE CONTROL OF ARMS: Russian Plan on Chemical Weapons – ‘It’s Possible if It’s Real,’ He Says.” WaPo: “Syria Welcomes Russian plan to avert U.S. strike: CALL TO GIVE UP CHEMICAL ARSENAL: Obama cautions but sees potential breakthrough.” L.A. Times: “U.S. weighs Russia’s offer on Syrian arms: A call for chemical weapons to be placed in U.N. control gives Obama an alternative to a military strike.” Boston Globe 5-col. banner hed: “Talk swirls of a peaceful resolution: Russia, Syria pounce on Kerry’s remarks about surrendering arms; Obama cautious.”  USA Today: “Obama steps back on Syria: Russia pushes plan to have Assad give up chemical weapons.” WSJ: “Obama Push to Hit Syria Takes Detour.”


OBAMA HEADS TO THE HILL – POLITICO’s Carrie Budoff Brown explains Obama’s thinking as he lunches with Senate Democrats and Republicans in separate meetings today: “President Barack Obama will attempt Tuesday to reset — again — his Syria strategy after a week of conflicting statements, mixed messages and unanswered questions. The best that Obama can hope for, according to one senior administration official, is that lawmakers and voters give his argument a second chance. The White House will know quickly whether Obama succeeded — or failed — based on what it hears from Capitol Hill. The president, in a rare flash of insecurity, told NBC News Monday that even he wasn’t confident that he could win congressional approval for military strikes. The use-of-force resolution looks dead in the House, increasingly doubtful in the Senate and stubbornly unpopular with the public. Between the prime time address and a trip to Capitol Hill earlier Tuesday to meet separately with Senate Democrats and Republicans, Obama will get a pair of the high-profile opportunities to shift the trend. ‘We’ve got a lot of cards to play still,’ the official said.


– “But it won’t be easy. Democrats and Republicans say they need Obama to make a clear case for why it’s in America’s national security interests to strike Syria and what will be achieved by the attack. They want to know how limited strikes wouldn’t drag the country into another prolonged military action.” http://politi.co/15NYojh


9 TONIGHT: Obama speaks to the nation on Syria in a primetime address from the East Room.


SENATE MAJORITY LEADER HARRY REID has delayed a procedural vote on an increasingly unpopular Syria resolution that had been set for Wednesday, USA Today’s Susan Page reports. “Six senators, including five Republicans and one Democrat, announced Monday they would vote against a resolution authorizing the use of force — a strong indication that the administration’s efforts to build bipartisan support have been ineffective. The Senate was scheduled to vote Wednesday on a procedural motion to begin formal debate on the resolution, but Reid announced late Monday the vote would be delayed in order to buy the president more time to make his case to senators and the public.” http://usat.ly/17LUMMm


– Meanwhile, Syrian protesters welcomed returning lawmakers to Capitol Hill, Roll Call’s Hannah Hess reports: http://bit.ly/18LNs1G


– Members of the Congressional Black Caucus are still undecided about whether to back the Syria strike resolution after meeting with Obama and National Security Adviser Susan Rice at the White House, Ginger Gibson reports: http://politi.co/19DyGuW


** A message from the Reagan Presidential Foundation: Registration has opened for “The Reagan National Defense Forum: Building Peace Through Strength Through 2025.” Speakers include Secretary Chuck Hagel, General Martin Dempsey, Secretary John McHugh, Admiral Jonathan Greenert, SASC Chairman Carl Levin and HASC Chairman “Buck” McKeon.


ISSA TO CANTOR: LET’S VOTE AGAIN ON AMASH AMENDMENT – In a letter going out this morning, House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) urges Majority Leader Eric Cantor to hold another vote on legislation authored by Rep. Justin Amash that would defund an NSA program that collects Americans’ phone records. Issa previously voted against it, but he’s had a change of heart since new revelations that communications of Americans had been gathered in the data-collection programs.  The chairman calls for moving legislation to the floor – including language from the Amash amendment – “that both increases the transparency of the Agency’s programs and reinforces the constitutional protections of our citizens.” Read the letter here:  http://bit.ly/1fUptjw


HUDDLE FIRST LOOK: DCCC VIDEO: GOP LOST AUGUST RECESS – The DCCC is out with a new video this morning highlighting the backlash that House Republicans faced during the August recess. The video, called “Republicans Lost August,” includes local coverage of protests, rallies, and events where Republicans felt the heat on issues ranging from immigration and social security to ethics investigations.


DCCC Chairman Steve Israel will reinforce that message at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast this morning and will discuss how the fiscal debates this fall only reinforce all the problems House Republicans have with voters.  Watch the video here: http://bit.ly/13FE7J2


GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, September 10, 2013, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of the day’s congressional news. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @mkinzel and @suraechinn.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate meets at 10 a.m. and recess from 12:30 until 2:15 p.m. for party caucuses lunches with President Barack Obama. The House also meets at 10 with first votes expected between 1:30 and 2:30 p.m. and last votes between 4:15 and 5 p.m. on legislation including the National Association of Registration Agents and Brokers Reform Act and the Science Laureates of the United States Act.


AROUND THE HILL – W.H. Chief of Staff Denis McDonough meets with the House Democratic Caucus at 8:50 a.m. in HVC-215, followed by a media availability with Leader Nancy Pelosi. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse holds a news conference on climate change at 9:30 a.m. in the Senate Swamp. Speaker John Boehner and other GOP leaders hold a post-conference media availability at 10 a.m. in HC-8. Sen. Whitehouse and Reps. Chris Van Hollen, Rosa DeLauro and Jan Schakowsky denounce tea party efforts to sabotage Obamacare at 10:15 a.m. in SVC 200. Sen. Jeff Flake and others speak on the farm bill at 10:45 a.m. in the Senate Swamp. Reps. Michael Grimm, Earl Blumenauer and Jim McGovern speak on transit parity benefits at 11 a.m. at the House Triangle. Also at 11, Reps. Thomas Massie and Jared Polis speak on the conflicts in state and federal laws governing industrial hemp farming in Cannon 122.


Sens. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz and Mike Lee speak at the “Exempt America from ObamaCare” rally from noon to 2 p.m. on the West Lawn of the Capitol. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer holds a pen and pad briefing at 1 p.m. in H-144. The Property Casualty Insurers Association of American host Reps. Dennis Ross and Bill Pascrell at a closed congressional briefing on how to prepare for natural disasters, at 1 p.m. in Cannon 121. Rep. Ron Desantis and Sen. David  Vitter speak on OPM subsidies within Obamacare at 2 p.m. at the House Triangle. Congressional leaders hold a Gold Medal Ceremony honoring the four girls killed in the 1963 Birmingham church bombing, at 3 p.m. in Statuary Hall.


BEFORE PRIMARY DAY, LAWRENCE O’DONNELL ASKS WEINER: WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU? –   Corinne Lestch writes for the New York Daily News: “Anthony Weiner took a beating on the night before the mayoral primary from MSNBC host Lawrence O’Donnell, who repeatedly asked the scandal-scarred Democratic candidate, ‘What is wrong with you?’ The TV host turned his show, ‘The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell,’ into a combative, bizarre, not-quite-therapy session Monday night when he barraged Weiner with vague questions, barely letting the mayoral hopeful get a word in edgewise. … After an awkward pause, Weiner replied that he didn’t understand the question. ‘I mean, what is wrong with you that you cannot seem to imagine a life without elective office?’ The two men began arguing, and O’Donnell waffled between showing disgust and tolerance for Weiner’s sexting scandals, which plunged him far behind the other candidates in the polls.” http://nydn.us/1eyGORf Watch here: http://youtu.be/mVSOe-sx2gw


THE ROGERS REPORT: HOUSE GOP MAY RESURRECT LEGISLATIVE GAMBIT ON OBAMACARE – “House Republicans are dusting off an old legislative gambit from April 2011 as one way to move ahead this week with a stopgap spending bill for the first months of the new fiscal year beginning Oct. 1,” David Rogers writes. “The goal is to give conservatives a vote on defunding health care reform without resulting in a government shutdown. It has worked before, but ‘before’ is the operative word. And until Tuesday’s Republican Conference, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) won’t really know whether this flash from the past can flash again. Most simply, the procedure calls for sending the Senate a stopgap spending bill with a resolution that would alter the text of the bill once it’s enrolled for presentation to President Barack Obama. In this case, the so-called enrollment correction would bar funding to carry out Public Law 111-148, Obama’s signature health care reforms. But the Democratic-controlled Senate retains the right to choose: accepting the spending resolution with or without the so-called correction.” http://politi.co/1ezcTbE


– CLUB FOR GROWTH PRESIDENT CHRIS CHOCOLA RESPONDS: “Are these news reports from The Onion? Or are they real? When members were at home over recess, did they hear their constituents ask for legislative tricks or principled leadership? Trying to fool Republicans into voting to fund Obamacare is even worse than offering a bill that deliberately funds it. I hope this proposal is nothing more than a bad joke and is quickly discarded. Republicans should simply do what they say they are for by passing a Continuing Resolution that doesn’t fund Obamacare.”


SANFORD GOT EXEMPTION TO TAKE FIANCEE TO ISRAEL – Shane Goldmacher writes in National Journal: “Rep. Mark Sanford, whose extramarital dalliance abroad while governor of South Carolina led to scandal, took his mistress-turned-fiancée, María Belén Chapur, to Israel in August, on a trip paid for by the American Israel Education Foundation, congressional records show. Such privately funded trips are typically limited to relatives, but Sanford, a Republican who won a House seat in a special election earlier in the year, asked for and received a special exemption to take Belén Chapur along. Sanford gave a two-word answer on the congressional travel form when asked why he wanted to participate in the Israel trip. ‘Educational purposes,’ he wrote.


– “The American Israel Education Foundation spent more than $ 18,558 to fly Sanford and his fiancée to and from Israel for the weeklong journey. They flew business class, records show, with round-trip flights that cost more than $ 5,000 apiece. They were part of a delegation of roughly two dozen Republicans, including House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy. … The couple departed for Israel on Aug. 10 and returned Aug. 18. The website LegiStorm, which tracks congressional travel, first noted the participation of Belén Chapur on the trip, which included stops in Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Tel Aviv, and the Sea of Galilee. Sanford’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.” http://bit.ly/1al4HZR The original Legistorm report: http://bit.ly/1cZ1O1O


MONDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Paul Hays was the first to correctly answer that Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. had to resign his solicitor general post when his father became chief justice of the U.S. in 1930.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Paul Hays has today’s question: Who is the only signer of the Declaration of Independence buried in Washington, D.C.? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** A message from the Reagan Presidential Foundation and Library: The Reagan National Defense Forum on November 16, 2013 is bringing together leaders and key stakeholders in the defense community – including members of Congress, civilian officials and military leaders from the Defense Department and industry – to address the health of our national defense and to stimulate a discussion that promotes policies that strengthen the United States military into the future.  Registrations is $ 499 per person. For more information and tickets, please visit www.ReaganFoundation.org/Defense.  


The program includes a keynote address by General Dempsey, remarks by Secretary Hagel, and multiple panels including “Counterterrorism in 2025,” “Congress, Industry and the Pentagon” and “The Industrial Base After a Decade of War.”


“My husband would be so pleased to know that his ‘Peace Through Strength’ policies are being discussed again with a focus on today’s new technology and tomorrow’s needs.” – Former First Lady Nancy Reagan




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



AN ESCAPE HATCH FOR OBAMA ON SYRIA? – Obama heads to the Hill – Issa to Cantor: Let"s vote again on Amash amdt. – O"Donnell to Weiner on primary eve: What"s wrong with you? - trivia

Monday, September 9, 2013

Why The Press Is Fixated On Anthony Weiner, Mayoral Loser


Anthony Weiner SC Why the press is fixated on Anthony Weiner, mayoral loser


With the campaign in the home stretch, you might think the national media spotlight would fall on Bill de Blasio, who polls show to be in a commanding position to become New York’s next mayor.


Or perhaps the national press might be taking a closer look at his nearest rivals, Bill Thompson and Christine Quinn.


Nuh uh. It’s still all about Anthony Weiner.


Guess who was on Meet the Press yesterday? Someone who might actually be moving into Gracie Mansion? Nope, Anthony Weiner.


And what did Weiner do to deserve this? He went on a rant after some moron started heckling him at a Jewish bakery in Brooklyn about being “married to an Arab.”


Read More at Fox News . By Howard Kurtz.


Please share this post with your friends and comment below. If you haven’t already, take a moment to sign up for our free newsletter above and friend us on Twitter and Facebook to get real time updates.



Western Journalism



Why The Press Is Fixated On Anthony Weiner, Mayoral Loser

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Weiner Defends Latest Catfight With Heckler


(Newser)Politico calls it a meltdown; Anthony Weiner says he “stood up to a heckler.” Ahead of the Jewish new year, Rosh Hashanah, the mayoral candidate visited a bakery in New York’s Borough Park, where he had a heated exchange with a man… More »




(Newser)Politico calls it a meltdown; Anthony Weiner says he “stood up to a heckler.” Ahead of the Jewish new year, Rosh Hashanah, the mayoral candidate visited a bakery in New York’s Borough Park, where he had a heated exchange with a man in a yarmulke. It appears to begin with the man calling Weiner a “scumbag” as he begins to exit the bakery. “That’s a charming guy right there,” Weiner notes. The man apparently follows with, “You’re married to an Arab,” Slate notes. “That’s very nice, in front of children, you use that language,” Weiner says. It’s there that the edited video, which made the rounds before Weiner’s camp released the full clip, begins, per Slate.


The pair have a lengthy argument. The man—one Saul Kessler, according to Politicker— calls Weiner “disgusting,” prompting the candidate’s “takes one to know one, jackass.” “You have a nerve to even walk around in public?” asks Kessler. Weiner replies, “Oh yeah, and you’re a perfect person? … What rabbi taught you that you’re my judge?” Kessler says Weiner is “fine,” but should “stay out of the public eye”; Weiner notes that he has “fought very hard for this community and delivered more than you will ever.” Weiner’s later tweet says he


  • “Stood up to a heckler. Yep. Did that. That’s what Mayors have to do sometimes.”

 Less »



Politics from Newser



Weiner Defends Latest Catfight With Heckler

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Eliot Spitzer: Anthony Weiner Should Not Be Mayor


CHRIS MATTHEWS: You’re not going to vote for Anthony Weiner, can you just say that now? You don’t think he should be mayor of New York.


ELIOT SPITZER: Fair point. That is correct.


MATTHEWS: He should not be Mayor of New York?


SPITZER: That is correct.


###


MATTHEWS: If a [city] public official used his office equipment to engage in the kind of past time that Anthony Weiner has been involved in for the last couple of years, would you fire him?


SPITZER: I think the answer is yes




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Eliot Spitzer: Anthony Weiner Should Not Be Mayor

Weiner campaign manager quits




  • Campaign manager’s departure is latest sign Weiner’s mayoral bid is struggling

  • Weiner has acknowledged he didn’t stop having raunchy online chats after he left Congress

  • Weiner said he couldn’t say for sure how many more women might come forward



Washington (CNN) — Days after Anthony Weiner admitted to lewd chats with women online, his campaign manager quit, Weiner and his campaign said Sunday.


Danny Kedem’s departure is the latest sign Weiner’s New York City mayoral bid is struggling amid allegations of online sexual impropriety. After the chats and photographs became public Tuesday, a poll showed him dropping to second place among Democratic candidates for mayor and his favorable numbers plummeting.


“Danny has left the campaign,” Weiner told CNN affiliate NY1. “He did a remarkable job.”


Praising the “excellent staff” remaining in his organization, Weiner said more volunteers had flocked to his bid in the last few days than at any point since his campaign began.


“This isn’t about the people working on the campaign, it’s about the people that we’re working for,” he said.





Weiner admits to new sexting





Could Weiner sexting hurt Clinton?


Kedem,a 31-year-old operative who previously worked for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, declined comment in an e-mail to CNN.


Weiner first acknowledged Tuesday that he did not stop sending raunchy online chats to women when he left Congress in 2011. That resignation was prompted by allegations from several women that Weiner had sent them lewd photographs of himself.


Speaking at a news conference Thursday, the Democrat said he couldn’t say for sure how many more women might come forward.


“There are a few. I don’t have a specific number for you,” Weiner said.


Pressed to provide a guess as to how many online relationships occurred after his resignation, Weiner said, “I don’t believe I had any more than three.”


He has resisted calls from his rivals to withdraw from the mayor’s race, saying the decision of whether he’s trustworthy enough for the job should be up to voters.


His chief rival for the Democratic nomination, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, stopped short of calling for his withdrawal from the mayor’s race Sunday but lambasted his actions as generating further distrust in government.


“I think it’s become very clear that former Congress member Weiner has a pattern of reckless behavior, an inability to tell the truth and a real lack of maturity and responsibility,” Quinn said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “I don’t think he should be mayor, and I think voters, if he stays in the race, will make that very clear.”


On Friday, Weiner indicated he may stop answering questions altogether about his online relationships.


“There’s going to reach a point fairly soon that I’m going to say I think I’ve said enough about it, and I’m going to keep just talking about other things,” he told reporters on Staten Island.


CNN’s Chris Kokenes and Ashley Killough contributed to this report.




CNN.com – Politics



Weiner campaign manager quits

Weiner brushes aside Clinton criticism

Anthony Weiner is pictured. | AP Photo

The question came during Weiner’s appearance at a mayoral forum in the Bronx. | AP Photo





Anthony Weiner reportedly dissed the Clintons — his wife’s employers who have held him at a distance for years — on Monday night, as he brushed off a question about whether he would be responsive to a request from them to get out of the New York City mayor’s race.


The question came during Weiner’s appearance at a mayoral forum in the Bronx, according to reports on Twitter from New York Daily News reporter Erin Durkin.





Spitzer not voting for Weiner






“I am not terribly interested in what people who are not voters in the city of New York have to say,” Weiner said when asked what he would say if the Clintons asked him to drop out, according to Durkin.


A Weiner spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to an email, nor did a Clinton spokesman.


(PHOTOS: 8 times Weiner lied about lewd pics)


Weiner’s wife Huma Abedin is a top aide to Hillary Clinton.


The Clintons have not asked Weiner to drop out. But associates have made clear they are displeased with the latest humiliation he has caused his wife.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Weiner brushes aside Clinton criticism

Friday, July 26, 2013

Weiner: Up to 3 women since quitting


He estimated there had been six to 10 women with whom he virtually engaged in total. | AP Photo





NEW YORK — Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner said Thursday that he may have engaged in online sexual relationships with up to three women since resigning from Congress in 2011.


“I don’t believe I had any more than three,” he said when asked at a press conference how many relationships since his resignation were sexual in nature.





Weiner: Timeline of scandal






He spoke with reporters after volunteering at a soup kitchen in an orthodox Jewish section of Brooklyn, a neighborhood lined with kosher bakeries where many women were wearing long skirts and some men wore black hats.


(Also on POLITICO: The Huma Abedin survival guide)


His comments came several days after Sydney Leathers, a 23-year-old Indiana resident, said that she had a sexually explicit online relationship with him more than a year after the former Democratic congressman stepped down from his seat after accidentally tweeting a lewd picture. In an interview with “Inside Edition” that aired Thursday, Leathers went public about her exchanges with Weiner, saying she felt “manipulated” by him.


That further fueled the media circus that Weiner’s campaign has become.


“I’ll tell ya, I’m not a perfect messenger for anything,” he told reporters later Thursday evening, when asked what example such activities set for his young supporters. “I don’t know who is,” he continued, adding that he thought voters were more focused on his issues-based messages.


(Also on POLITICO: Critics: Abedin following Clinton plan)


Weiner also told reporters Thursday that he estimated there had been six to 10 women with whom he had virtually engaged in total, before and after his resignation. He declined to give more specifics.


“There were more than — there were a few, I don’t have a specific number for you,” he said, when pressed on how many women he had engaged. “There were a few. I said at the time of my resignation there have been six; I don’t think in total there are any more.”


He added, “Here’s the problem: there are people I’ve had exchanges with that are completely appropriate … there were no pictures, no illicit texts or anything like that. If those people want to say they don’t like the exchanges either, I don’t know where to put them.”


When pressed again, he said, “Six to 10, I suppose, but I can’t tell you, absolutely, what someone is going to consider inappropriate or not.”


But he wouldn’t provide other details on the women, even when reporters pointed out that they hold the power to further derail his campaign message if they choose to come forth with their own accounts of the relationships.


(PHOTOS: 8 times Weiner lied about lewd pics)


“The only thing you haven’t learned — you want names of people, right?” Weiner said. “I’m not going to do that. … Why should I drag them into this? Is that what you want, names of people? And then, remember something, these were people I never met. These were anonymous people on the Internet. The last woman herself is remaining anonymous, or wanted to.”


Later Thursday, at an event in Queens sponsored by Voces Latinas, a Latina advocacy group, he was asked to address issues including women’s health and female economic advancement. He pivoted when asked later whether talking about such subjects made him uncomfortable in light of recent developments.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Weiner: Up to 3 women since quitting

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Weiner Caught With His Pants Down…Again


490px Anthony Weiner official portrait 112th Congress Weiner Caught With His Pants Down...Again


Is disgraced former New York Congressman Anthony Weiner really this incorrigible?


Did he really engage in lewd online behavior after the notorious nude picture scandal that momentarily ousted him from politics?


That’s what the popular gossip site TheDirty is [content warning at the linkalleging.


Recent screen shots of sexually explicit online chat sessions posted by the gossip site on Monday show Weiner may have struck again — all after he fessed up to steamy online relationships in 2011.


“My source is solid. She really thought Anthony Weiner and her were in love, they spoke on the phone daily multiple times a day for 6 months,” The Dirty reports.


Read more at The Blaze. By Becket Adams.


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Western Journalism



Weiner Caught With His Pants Down…Again

Ridiculed Weiner remains defiant


NEW YORK — He was taunted and booed and ridiculed for using the mantle “Carlos Danger.”


But there Anthony Weiner was, back on the campaign trail Wednesday after his bombshell news conference a day earlier, projecting the same defiance in the face of self-imposed adversity that has marked his surreal campaign for New York City mayor.





Weiner: Timeline of scandal




Weiner full press conference






“It’s been rough,” he told reporters at one point, when asked how his last 24 hours have been. “These are things that I brought upon myself, I thought they were going to come out toward the end of the campaign, and some of them have. So look, I’m pressing forward.”


(QUIZ: Do you know Anthony Weiner?)


He was referring, of course, to his latest confession of inappropriate online sexual relations with young women. At a news conference Tuesday, Weiner joined his wife, longtime Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin, and admitted that, yes, there was more sexting incidents — even after he resigned from Congress in disgrace two years ago after accidentally tweeting a crotch shot.


At a forum among Democratic hopefuls in the Bronx Wednesday night, some of his lesser-known opponents let Weiner have it. Former city Councilman Sal Albanese dismissed him as a “distraction” from discussing the middle class and the Rev. Erick Salgado bashed Weiner for using the name “Carlos Danger” while engaging in his online dalliances. City Comptroller John Liu said Weiner was dodging a question (about credit checks, not sex selfies).


“If it is a distraction to talk about the challenges facing the middle class … to talk about the idea that we need affordable housing, to talk about [how] we need affordable education, if you think that’s a distraction, so be it,” Weiner swung back at Albanese. “I’m ready to have a serious conversation about issues. That’s what these good people came to hear.”


(Also on POLITICO: Weiner accuser: ‘A horny, middle-aged man)


He flashed a sense of humor, however, when he and the other candidates onstage were asked “Facebook or Twitter?” A smiling Weiner, shaking his head, noted that his campaign uses Twitter. Turning to Salgado, who said he was trying to learn Twitter, Weiner cracked, “All I have to say is, Salgado, don’t ask me.”


Several campaign rivals have called on Weiner to drop out of the race, including former Comptroller Bill Thompson, who said earlier Wednesday he was “disgusted” by Weiner’s conduct. But the former Democratic congressman is refusing to budge.


He was booed earlier in the evening as he geared up to address a New York City Housing Authority public hearing, But catcalls were countered by cheers and some “amens” as he delivered a forceful address outlining some of his goals on the housing front.


There and at the debate, Weiner struck an assertive, and at times, aggressive tone.


(Also on POLITICO: Critics: Abedin following Clinton plan)


At the mayoral forum, held at Bronx Community College, Weiner spoke mostly about usual mayoral campaign grist: education, health care and housing. Wearing a yellow tie and with his wedding ring on display, he had a vocal contingent of supporters on hand, many of whom wielded signs.


As he strode into the debate, mobbed by cameras and running reporters, his supporters drowned out the chants of all of the other candidates’ advocates, who also bore signs.


A smaller group of supporters gathered across the street from the earlier housing event. There, he turned his back on moderators, facing the crowd instead. He converted some of the more vocal members of the audience as he pledged a housing “Marshall Plan” and described his own encounters with decrepit public housing.


“We’re going to change the way we do things in this city,” he pledged. “No longer will the residents of public housing, or should they have to be, treated as if they are victims every day when they walk into their homes.”


He was swarmed by the pack of media, and he sought to make some overtures: His spokeswoman, wielding a bag of cupcakes, promised reporters at the housing event “treats” if they would move down the sidewalk, behind a barrier. And Weiner gamely sidled up to the waiting reporters and had press availabilities at both events.


But he declined to delve back in to the raunchier details of the story that surfaced on Tuesday. “Some things that have been posted today are true and some are not,” he said a day earlier, while apologizing for his actions.


“People have to make their decision,” he said, when a reporter noted that some voters are questioning his credibility. “There’s more time in this campaign and I’m going to keep talking about the issues and the middle class struggling to make it, and I understand part of it is earning people’s trust. I certainly understand that.”


When pressed on why he hadn’t been more forthcoming about other women with whom he was having possible explicit exchanges, Weiner downplayed his most recent accuser.


“I don’t want to be in a position of refuting what anonymous people on blogs said,” Weiner told reporters, referring to graphic alleged conversations that took place between himself and another woman, posted on the gossip website thedirty.com. “They have a right to say whatever they want. I brought that upon myself.


”I’m not gonna get into a back-and-forth with an anonymous person who obviously doesn’t want to become public. They have every right in the world to say whatever they want, to release whatever they want. But I’m not gonna do it and I’m not gonna litigate this.”


Nik Richie, owner and editor of the thedirty.com, told POLITICO on Wednesday afternoon that the woman who made the allegations reported on his website is looking to go public, “my guess is tomorrow.”




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Ridiculed Weiner remains defiant

Weiner Caught With His Pants Down…Again


490px Anthony Weiner official portrait 112th Congress Weiner Caught With His Pants Down...Again


Is disgraced former New York Congressman Anthony Weiner really this incorrigible?


Did he really engage in lewd online behavior after the notorious nude picture scandal that momentarily ousted him from politics?


That’s what the popular gossip site TheDirty is [content warning at the linkalleging.


Recent screen shots of sexually explicit online chat sessions posted by the gossip site on Monday show Weiner may have struck again — all after he fessed up to steamy online relationships in 2011.


“My source is solid. She really thought Anthony Weiner and her were in love, they spoke on the phone daily multiple times a day for 6 months,” The Dirty reports.


Read more at The Blaze. By Becket Adams.


Please share this post with your friends and comment below. If you haven’t already, take a moment to sign up for our free newsletter above and friend us on Twitter and Facebook to get real time updates.



Western Journalism



Weiner Caught With His Pants Down…Again

Weiner defiant amid calls to quit New York mayoral race




Former U.S. congressman from New York and current Democratic candidate for New York City Mayor Anthony Weiner is followed by the media as he leaves his New York City apartment July 24, 2013. REUTERS/Mike Segar


1 of 2. Former U.S. congressman from New York and current Democratic candidate for New York City Mayor Anthony Weiner is followed by the media as he leaves his New York City apartment July 24, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Mike Segar






NEW YORK | Thu Jul 25, 2013 12:43am EDT



NEW YORK (Reuters) – Anthony Weiner resisted mounting calls to bow out of the New York City mayoral race on Wednesday, a day after admitting he had continued the sexually charged online chats that led him to resign from Congress in disgrace two years ago.


Weiner, who took the lead in several polls soon after announcing his political comeback in May, said in an email to supporters that he should have been clearer about how long the behavior had persisted but that he hoped voters would give him another chance.


The New York Times and the New York Daily News both published editorials on Wednesday urging Weiner, a Democrat who was once a leading liberal voice in Congress, to end his bid to follow Mayor Michael Bloomberg into City Hall.


“The serially evasive Mr. Weiner should take his marital troubles and personal compulsions out of the public eye, away from cameras, off the Web and out of the race for mayor of New York City,” the New York Times wrote in its lead editorial, adding he had “disqualified himself” for public service.


Weiner told a news conference on Tuesday he had sent lewd images of himself to women online until at least last summer.


The New York Post, known for its outrageous headlines, went with “Meet Carlos Danger” – a reference to Weiner’s reported pseudonym in the online chats with a woman he met over the Internet.


Weiner insisted he would not drop out. In his email, he said his campaign was about something larger than himself and that he would not “leave New Yorkers without a choice.”


Of the resumption of online activity that had cost him his last job, Weiner said: “It was a terrible mistake that I unfortunately returned to during a rough time in our marriage.”


Until the revelations, Weiner was ahead in the mayoral race. On Wednesday, Quinnipiac University released a poll – conducted before Weiner’s news conference – that found him leading Democratic candidates with 26 percent of the vote. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn followed with 22 percent, and former City Comptroller Bill Thompson had 20 percent.


Weiner’s latest troubles began on Monday after a gossip website called The Dirty published a series of sexually explicit messages and images an unnamed young woman said she received from Weiner, including pictures of his penis.


The woman was identified by CNN on Wednesday as Sydney Elaine Leathers, 23, of Evansville, Indiana. CNN interviewed an acquaintance who said she had engaged in a sexually explicit text relationship with Weiner.


Reuters was unable to independently verify the identity of the woman. She could not be reached by Reuters for comment. The acquaintance, contacted by Reuters, declined to be interviewed.


The woman gave the website numerous screenshots of what the website said were chats on Facebook and another social media website in which Weiner described the sexual acts he wanted to perform on her and which she apparently encouraged.


“You are a walking fantasy,” Weiner reportedly said in one of the chat’s less explicit exchanges, which took place after the two began communicating in July 2012, when the woman was 22.


Buzzfeed, a news and entertainment website, said it had identified a woman in her early 20s from Indiana as the source of the new chats.


Nik Richie, the owner of The Dirty, told Reuters in an interview that he could not confirm the woman’s name. But he described her as “starstruck” and said she genuinely believed she and Weiner were in love.


“They would have conversations all the time. He was like a little child. He needed validation from her all the time. They talked every day, sometimes several times a day,” he said.


‘HUMA FOR MAYOR’


During Tuesday’s news conference, Weiner’s wife, Huma Abedin, stood at his side, alternately smiling and looking awkwardly away. After apologizing for her nervousness, she read out her own statement saying she had forgiven him.


To many New Yorkers, Abedin, a longtime aide to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, proved a sympathetic figure.


“I say Huma for mayor,” Tina Brown, the editor of Newsweek, wrote on Twitter. “She has all the qualities he doesn’t.”


Rupert Murdoch, whose News Corp owns the New York Post, called Weiner a “sicko.”


“Should help city by just fading away,” he wrote on Twitter.


Some voters shared the sentiment.


“I know nobody’s perfect, but I don’t think he’s trustworthy,” said Dottie Lipski, 55, a graphic designer.


Other voters said they didn’t think Weiner’s personal failings had anything to do with his ability to lead.


“It’s two separate things. It doesn’t have anything to do with his qualifications to be mayor,” said Racquita McMillon, a 38-year-old merchandise analyst.


One of his rivals in the Democratic primary, Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, who was in fourth place with 15 percent of the vote in the latest Quinnipiac poll, urged Weiner to withdraw. Thompson, who often appears in third place in the polls, said the news was “deeply disturbing.”


Quinn, Weiner’s nearest rival, stopped short of calling on Weiner to withdraw, but criticized what she described as “a pattern of reckless behavior, consistently poor judgment, and difficulty with the truth,” in a statement on Wednesday.


Weiner, who has often gamely conceded that his name is ready-made for late-night comedians’ jokes, was ribbed on Tuesday night by David Letterman, who suggested other pseudonyms for Weiner to consider: Carlos Dangler, Throb Reiner and Eliot Spitzer.


(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and Edith Honan; Additional reporting by Brendan O’Brien; Editing by Dina Kyriakidou and Eric Beech)






Reuters: Politics



Weiner defiant amid calls to quit New York mayoral race

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Weiner faces new scandal, now with wife at side







New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner glances at his wife, Huma Abedin, as she speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner glances at his wife, Huma Abedin, as she speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York City Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner takes reporters questions during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner speaks during a news conference alongside his wife Huma Abedin at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)





Huma Abedin, alongside her husband, New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner, speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)





New York City Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner grimaces during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)













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NEW YORK (AP) — When a heckled, harried Anthony Weiner resigned from Congress and apologized for the explicit text messages that had destroyed his career, a key figure was notably absent: his then-pregnant wife, Huma Abedin.


On Tuesday, there was Weiner again, making a public mea culpa for a newfound sexting scandal that erupted amid the mayoral run he hopes will rewrite his political future. But the Democrat was there to stay in, not bow out — and Abedin was by his side.


“I love him, I have forgiven him, I believe in him,” and the sexting matter is “between us,” she said, a message that could prove important to shaping voters’ views as they digest his latest admission.


After the gossip website The Dirty posted X-rated text messages and a crotch shot that it said the former congressman exchanged with an unidentified woman, Weiner acknowledged sending such messages as recently as last summer, more than a year after he resigned from the House because of similar behavior with at least a half-dozen women. With Abedin smiling at his side, he said at a news conference that “this is entirely behind me,” and both made it clear they were moving ahead with his campaign.


“I want to bring my vision to the people of the city of New York. I hope they are willing to still continue to give me a second chance,” a collected Weiner said. Then he went on to talk policy at a candidate forum on gay men’s issues, where he was warmly received.


Weiner, 48, has been near the top of most polls since his late entry into the race in May. The latest disclosures could severely test voters’ willingness to forgive him. The New York Times, the Daily News and some of his mayoral rivals called on him to drop out of the race.


But Abedin’s visible support may help him win voters’ approval, too.


“I don’t think it’s a good sign” that Weiner’s behavior continued even after his resignation, said Andrew Taub, 22, who works in the venture capital arena. “But I do believe for some people looking for a sign, for something to bolster his campaign, (the fact that Abedin is staying with him) says a lot.”


Still, the disclosure suddenly puts Weiner’s indiscretions, judgment and candor back in the forefront of his campaign, and political analysts say it could be damaging: “It makes it tougher to believe this is behind him,” said Democratic former state Assemblyman Michael Benjamin, now a political consultant.


And some voters who were open-minded about a second chance may not be able to stomach a third.


“He had a chance to redeem himself, and if he did it twice, he really betrayed the public’s trust again,” Jeremy Green said. “I think he’s past the point of no return.”


Weiner and Abedin, however, sought to cast the newly revealed messages as nothing really new. “I said that other texts and photos were likely to come out, and today they have,” Weiner said. In a sign of how much he was projecting taking the messages in stride, he added that he was surprised that more hadn’t come out sooner.


Abedin said her husband had made some “horrible mistakes both before he resigned from Congress and after” but insisted she and her husband discussed “all of this” before he jumped into the mayor’s race in May. Seeming a bit choked with emotion, she noted that she had chosen to stay in the marriage, but “it was not an easy choice.”


Abedin, a longtime adviser to former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, has played a large and visible role in Weiner’s mayoral campaign.


Weiner said in a July 2, 2012, interview with People magazine that he’d “tried to become a better person” every day since the sexting scandal. And yet the latest indiscretion appears to have started just days after he gave that interview.


The woman involved in newly disclosed messages told The Dirty that she was 22 when she began chatting with Weiner on a social networking site in July 2012, and that their interchanges lasted six months. Weiner used the alias “Carlos Danger,” but she knew she was talking to the former congressman, she said.


The exchanges posted on The Dirty consist of sexually explicit fantasizing about various sex acts, and the site ran a pixelated photo of what it said were Weiner’s genitals. At one point, the man reported to be Weiner wrote, “I’m deeply flawed.”


The woman said Weiner exchanged nude photos of himself with her, engaged in phone sex with her, promised to help her get a job at the political website Politico and suggested meeting in a Chicago condo for a tryst.


“This was a bad situation for me because I really admired him. Even post-scandal, I thought he was misunderstood. Until I got to know him,” the woman was quoted as telling the website.


She said he later asked her to destroy the evidence of their chats. She insisted that she never had sex with Weiner or received any payment from him.


The woman said her relationship with Weiner “fizzled” in November 2012. She said she last heard from him this past April, when a New York Times Magazine profile revealed he was eying a mayoral run.


Weiner said not every allegation the woman made was true but that he was not going to dispute specific claims. The lawyer for The Dirty’s founder, Nik Ritchie, said his client was ill and would not comment Tuesday.


Weiner said his last sexting exchange happened “sometime last summer, I think,” after he and his wife sat down for a glowing People magazine profile in which they said they had gotten past their troubles.


Weiner told the Daily News of New York in May that at one point, he checked into a Houston psychiatric clinic to have his behavior evaluated, but “it wasn’t an addiction thing.”


Mayoral candidates Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and former City Councilman Sal Albanese, both Democrats, and billionaire John Catsimatidis, a Republican, called on Weiner to quit the race: “Enough is enough,” de Blasio said. Another Democratic mayoral hopeful, city Comptroller John Liu, stopped short of calling for Weiner to bow out but suggested his “propensity for pornographic selfies is a valid issue for voters.”


The other leading Democratic candidates, including City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and former City Comptroller Bill Thompson, did not immediately comment.


In an editorial posted online Tuesday, The New York Times said, “the serially evasive” Weiner “should take his marital troubles and personal compulsions out of the public eye, away from cameras, off the Web and out of the race for mayor of New York City.”


In an editorial Wednesday, the Daily News said: “He is not fit to lead America’s premier city. Lacking the dignity and discipline that New York deserves in a mayor, Weiner must recognize that his demons have no place in City Hall.”


___


Reach Jonathan Lemire on Twitter at: @JonLemire


___


Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz, Meghan Barr, Jake Pearson and Deepti Hajela contributed to this report.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Weiner faces new scandal, now with wife at side

Weiner faces new scandal, now with wife at side








New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner glances at his wife, Huma Abedin, as she speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner glances at his wife, Huma Abedin, as she speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York City Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner takes reporters questions during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)





New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner speaks during a news conference alongside his wife Huma Abedin at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)





Huma Abedin, alongside her husband, New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner, speaks during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)





New York City Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner grimaces during a news conference at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis headquarters, Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in New York. The former congressman says he’s not dropping out of the New York City mayoral race in light of newly revealed explicit online correspondence with a young woman. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)













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NEW YORK (AP) — When a heckled, harried Anthony Weiner resigned from Congress and apologized for the explicit text messages that had destroyed his career, a key figure was notably absent: his then-pregnant wife, Huma Abedin.


On Tuesday, there was Weiner again, making a public mea culpa for a newfound sexting scandal that erupted amid the mayoral run he hopes will rewrite his political future. But the Democrat was there to stay in, not bow out — and Abedin was by his side.


“I love him, I have forgiven him, I believe in him,” and the sexting matter is “between us,” she said, a message that could prove important to shaping voters’ views as they digest his latest admission.


After the gossip website The Dirty posted X-rated text messages and a crotch shot that it said the former congressman exchanged with an unidentified woman, Weiner acknowledged sending such messages as recently as last summer, more than a year after he resigned from the House because of similar behavior with at least a half-dozen women. With Abedin smiling at his side, he said at a news conference that “this is entirely behind me,” and both made it clear they were moving ahead with his campaign.


“I want to bring my vision to the people of the city of New York. I hope they are willing to still continue to give me a second chance,” a collected Weiner said. Then he went on to talk policy at a candidate forum on gay men’s issues, where he was warmly received.


Weiner, 48, has been near the top of most polls since his late entry into the race in May. The latest disclosures could severely test voters’ willingness to forgive him. The New York Times, the Daily News and some of his mayoral rivals called on him to drop out of the race.


But Abedin’s visible support may help him win voters’ approval, too.


“I don’t think it’s a good sign” that Weiner’s behavior continued even after his resignation, said Andrew Taub, 22, who works in the venture capital arena. “But I do believe for some people looking for a sign, for something to bolster his campaign, (the fact that Abedin is staying with him) says a lot.”


Still, the disclosure suddenly puts Weiner’s indiscretions, judgment and candor back in the forefront of his campaign, and political analysts say it could be damaging: “It makes it tougher to believe this is behind him,” said Democratic former state Assemblyman Michael Benjamin, now a political consultant.


And some voters who were open-minded about a second chance may not be able to stomach a third.


“He had a chance to redeem himself, and if he did it twice, he really betrayed the public’s trust again,” Jeremy Green said. “I think he’s past the point of no return.”


Weiner and Abedin, however, sought to cast the newly revealed messages as nothing really new. “I said that other texts and photos were likely to come out, and today they have,” Weiner said. In a sign of how much he was projecting taking the messages in stride, he added that he was surprised that more hadn’t come out sooner.


Abedin said her husband had made some “horrible mistakes both before he resigned from Congress and after” but insisted she and her husband discussed “all of this” before he jumped into the mayor’s race in May. Seeming a bit choked with emotion, she noted that she had chosen to stay in the marriage, but “it was not an easy choice.”


Abedin, a longtime adviser to former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, has played a large and visible role in Weiner’s mayoral campaign.


Weiner said in a July 2, 2012, interview with People magazine that he’d “tried to become a better person” every day since the sexting scandal. And yet the latest indiscretion appears to have started just days after he gave that interview.


The woman involved in newly disclosed messages told The Dirty that she was 22 when she began chatting with Weiner on a social networking site in July 2012, and that their interchanges lasted six months. Weiner used the alias “Carlos Danger,” but she knew she was talking to the former congressman, she said.


The exchanges posted on The Dirty consist of sexually explicit fantasizing about various sex acts, and the site ran a pixelated photo of what it said were Weiner’s genitals. At one point, the man reported to be Weiner wrote, “I’m deeply flawed.”


The woman said Weiner exchanged nude photos of himself with her, engaged in phone sex with her, promised to help her get a job at the political website Politico and suggested meeting in a Chicago condo for a tryst.


“This was a bad situation for me because I really admired him. Even post-scandal, I thought he was misunderstood. Until I got to know him,” the woman was quoted as telling the website.


She said he later asked her to destroy the evidence of their chats. She insisted that she never had sex with Weiner or received any payment from him.


The woman said her relationship with Weiner “fizzled” in November 2012. She said she last heard from him this past April, when a New York Times Magazine profile revealed he was eying a mayoral run.


Weiner said not every allegation the woman made was true but that he was not going to dispute specific claims. The lawyer for The Dirty’s founder, Nik Ritchie, said his client was ill and would not comment Tuesday.


Weiner said his last sexting exchange happened “sometime last summer, I think,” after he and his wife sat down for a glowing People magazine profile in which they said they had gotten past their troubles.


Weiner told the Daily News of New York in May that at one point, he checked into a Houston psychiatric clinic to have his behavior evaluated, but “it wasn’t an addiction thing.”


Mayoral candidates Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and former City Councilman Sal Albanese, both Democrats, and billionaire John Catsimatidis, a Republican, called on Weiner to quit the race: “Enough is enough,” de Blasio said. Another Democratic mayoral hopeful, city Comptroller John Liu, stopped short of calling for Weiner to bow out but suggested his “propensity for pornographic selfies is a valid issue for voters.”


The other leading Democratic candidates, including City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and former City Comptroller Bill Thompson, did not immediately comment.


In an editorial posted online Tuesday, The New York Times said, “the serially evasive” Weiner “should take his marital troubles and personal compulsions out of the public eye, away from cameras, off the Web and out of the race for mayor of New York City.”


In an editorial Wednesday, the Daily News said: “He is not fit to lead America’s premier city. Lacking the dignity and discipline that New York deserves in a mayor, Weiner must recognize that his demons have no place in City Hall.”


___


Reach Jonathan Lemire on Twitter at: @JonLemire


___


Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz, Meghan Barr, Jake Pearson and Deepti Hajela contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Weiner faces new scandal, now with wife at side