Disbelief from Seniors on Weiner's Sexting Relapse

Disbelief from Seniors on Weiner's Sexting Relapse

By JAKE PEARSON
NEW YORK
Retired tax auditor Jerry Stern was sitting in the front row with reporters the day in June 2011 when then-U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner–reading a short statement and ignoring the shouts from hecklers–announced his retirement from Congress at a senior center after some of his sexually-charged photographs and emails with women became public.

Two years after resigning, the married Democrat is a mayoral candidate–and finds himself yet again in a growing sexting scandal. He said Thursday he’d traded sexually explicit messages with as many as three women since resigning, bringing the total number of women with whom he had exchanged illicit messages to six to 10.

In conversations with nearly a dozen seniors at the center where Weiner made his 2011 speech–in the heart of his old Congressional district that covered parts of Brooklyn and Queens–almost everyone expressed disbelief that Weiner could find himself yet again in a scandalous situation.

And while many thought Weiner’s latest revelations made him unqualified to keep running, some remained his loyal defenders.

Another woman now is ambivalent about Weiner’s mayoral ambitions.

Weiner’s latest scandal appears to have taken a toll–a new NBC 4 New York/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll released Thursday showed he had fallen behind City Council Speaker Christine Quinn in the crowded Democratic field, despite placing near the top of most previous polls. Meanwhile, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called his behavior “reprehensible” and “disrespectful of women.”

Some rivals, newspaper editorial boards and other politicians have called on him to withdraw from the race, but Weiner has insisted he’s staying in.

He said Thursday he was still “working with people” to get help dealing with his penchant for X-rated online flirting and disputed that it’s an addiction.

Earlier this week, the gossip website The Dirty posted explicit messages that a woman said she and Weiner sent each other starting in July 2012–setting off a new wave of Weiner controversy. The scandal got seamier Thursday when the site posted an unredacted crotch shot that it said Weiner sent to a woman last year.

The woman who says she engaged in the online sex banter with Weiner last year, 23-year-old Sydney Leathers, confirmed her identity Thursday and told “Inside Edition” that Weiner disgusted her.

Weiner’s wife, Huma Abedin, a longtime aide to Hillary Clinton, has publicly defended her husband, standing beside him at a news conference Tuesday and saying she had forgiven him.

But even Abedin’s defense of her husband wasn’t enough for many of his former constituents at the center, where he also announced his candidacy for the City Council in 1992.

Weiner says he bets voters care more about their futures than about his past. But the new poll, which surveyed 551 registered voters Wednesday, found Quinn leads Weiner 25 percent to 16 percent, with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points. The poll also found 55 percent of registered Democrats now have an unfavorable impression of Weiner, while 30 percent see him favorably. The numbers were nearly the reverse of a June poll by the same entities, which tallied a 52-36 percent favorable-to-unfavorable split then.

Marilyn Strauss, 80, said Weiner’s behavior has been the talk of the town at the senior center.

___

Associated Press writers Jonathan Lemire and Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report.

COMMENTS

Please let us know if you're having issues with commenting.