home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT2516>
- <title>
- Sep. 25, 1989: A Skeleton In Barney's Closet
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 25, 1989 Boardwalk Of Broken Dreams
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- A Skeleton in Barney's Closet
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A gay prostitute stretches the limit for sex scandals
- </p>
- <p> Cases before the House ethics committee are stacking up
- like planes at Washington's National Airport, and so are the
- embarrassments for Congress. After the committee investigates
- Georgia Republican Newt Gingrich for a questionable book deal,
- it must consider Ohio Republican Donald Lukens, convicted in May
- of having sex with a 16-year-old girl. Then it will weigh the
- case of Illinois Democrat Gus Savage, accused of fondling an
- unwilling Peace Corps volunteer during a March trip to Zaire.
- Last week the committee agreed to investigate Massachusetts
- Democrat Barney Frank, who has admitted that he had an affair
- with a male prostitute.
- </p>
- <p> On a scale of 1 to HUD, Frank's transgression is a low
- single digit: there is no suggestion that he used his public
- office for personal gain. In the eyes of some, however, private
- failings are far more serious: they go to a leader's judgment
- and character, as Gary Hart and John Tower learned. For many
- people, the fact that the scandal involves gay sex makes Frank's
- behavior more offensive; among others, tolerance of
- homosexuality has shielded Frank from sharper criticism.
- </p>
- <p> At the least, Frank's judgment was appallingly naive. After
- an initial encounter in which he paid Steve Gobie $80 for sex,
- the Congressman says he tried to lift the younger man out of
- drugs and prostitution by hiring him to run errands. He wrote
- letters to Gobie's probation officer and paid his psychiatric
- bills. He allowed Gobie the use of a car and sometimes his
- apartment when he was out of town.
- </p>
- <p> After 18 months, Frank says, he dismissed Gobie upon
- discovering that he was bringing clients to Frank's apartment.
- Two years later, Gobie tried unsuccessfully to sell his story
- to the Washington Post. He then gave the story to the Washington
- Times for nothing, in hopes of getting a book contract for the
- male version of The Mayflower Madam. This week Gobie will appear
- on Geraldo, discussing his prospects for a television
- mini-series.
- </p>
- <p> While the House could censure Frank or reprimand him,
- colleagues and constituents so far have been generally
- sympathetic. The scandal does not involve seducing a minor, as
- it does with Lukens, or adultery, since Frank is single. It is
- an incident from a past secret life that has come back to haunt
- a legislator who is widely respected. Frank can debate and speak
- extemporaneously better than almost anyone else in the House,
- and he tackles some of its more complex problems like
- immigration and housing. Back home, he makes sure constituents
- get help from 18 staffers who track down Social Security checks
- and Medicaid benefits. Though he freely disclosed in 1987 that
- he was a homosexual, his district, which encompasses the liberal
- campuses of Boston and nearby blue-collar mill towns, re-elected
- him overwhelmingly in 1988 with 70% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Massachusetts Republicans have jumped on the Frank affair,
- and the latest poll shows that only 45% of the Congressman's
- constituents still look on him favorably -- a blow but not
- necessarily a defeat, since 61% want him to run for office
- again next year. Alexander Tennant, Massachusetts G.O.P. state
- committee director, says the political issue is "not Barney
- Frank's sex life but whether the Congressman broke the law."
- Gobie says he did, by abusing congressional immunity to avoid
- paying Gobie's parking tickets, a charge Frank denies.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier this month Frank apologized to other Democrats for
- the embarrassment he was causing. The audience's eyes were not
- averted as usual, says one Congressman, because "Barney was
- living in a different world in 1985 that most of us don't
- understand . . . We have all been stupid when we have fallen for
- the wrong person. Most of us were lucky enough to do it when we
- were younger."
- </p>
- <p> One reason Frank says he revealed his homosexuality was to
- square his private and public lives, to protect himself from
- the Gobies of the world who don't abide by the tacit social
- contract among former spouses and lovers not to talk because
- they know so much. When that pact is broken, the results can be
- devastating. Massachusetts Republican Edward Brooke, an able
- Senator for two terms, lost his seat to challenger Paul Tsongas
- amid divorce proceedings in 1978, damaged by press reports that
- focused on the breakup of his marriage.
- </p>
- <p> While university professors and college students might be
- expected to tolerate Frank's affair, when he returned to his
- district it was a largely working-class crowd that cheered him
- at a parade through Fall River soon after the story broke.
- Perhaps even in quiet, conservative Fall River, the world isn't
- as neat as it used to be. One must learn to forgive the sinner
- while hating the sin -- or risk shutting out the daughter who
- had the abortion, the son with AIDS, the nephew trapped by
- drugs. Even the most conservative parts of the Fourth District
- may decide to believe and forgive Frank rather than Gobie. Maybe
- those who catch the early bus know better than anyone that an
- honest day's work can sometimes be done no matter how messy life
- is at night.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-