Ensign Affair Still Raising Eyebrows…And Questions

Filed in National by on July 10, 2009

When I first read about the Ensign affair I thought it was just your standard, run-of-the-mill scandal, but it’s scandal that won’t end.

First, Doug Hampton gave an interview to the Las Vegas Sun. TPM Muckraker gives us the summary of the revelations:

  • Hampton said that Ensign paid Cindy more than $25,000 in severance when she stopped working for his campaign committees — a possible felony violation of campaign-finance law if he didn’t report it as an in-kind contribution. (Campaign reports show no such payment.)
  • Hampton said Ensign continued the affair for months after Hampton found out about it, and even well after the Ensigns and the Hamptons had confronted the issue together!
  • Hampton also said that Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) urged Ensign to end the liaison and to sweep it under the rug, suggesting that Ensign pay the Hamptons millions and help them resettle in Colorado.
  • Hampton released a letter written by Ensign to Cindy Hampton, in which he expresses deep remorse for the affair — which continued for around six months after the letter was written! (It reads like the words of a six-year-old who has been ordered by a parent to apologize, but has no independent grasp of what he did wrong.)
  • Go read the letter for yourself. The characterization of TPM Muckraker of the letter reading like a six-year-old forced to apologize is not far off the mark. Here’s how it starts out:

    This is the most important letter that I’ve ever written. What I did with you was wrong. I was completely self-centered and only thinking of myself. I used you for my own pleasure, not letting thoughts of you, Doug, Brandon, Blake or Brittany come into my mind. I betrayed everything I believe in. I lied to myself over and over. I justified my actions because I blamed my wife.

    I guess the remorse didn’t stick since the affair lasted six more months. Does any of this start having a Monica/Linda Tripp vibe to it? Why would the Hamptons keep the letter, and continue to work for him?

    The parts of the scandal that are raising some eyebrows are the $25,000 severance payment to Cynthia Hampton, which was not properly disclosed in campaign finance reports. This money is in addition to the money paid to both Hamptons and one of the Hampton sons as campaign staffers.

    It also looks like Senator Coburn is suffering some collateral damage. Hampton discloses that Coburn urged Ensign to end the affair and pay money to the Hamptons. Coburn did not deny this, until it was disclosed that John Ensign’s parents paid the Hamptons $96,000. Coburn is now denying that he urged Ensign to pay restitution to the Hamptons, but that he did urge Ensign to come clean.

    I think something fishy is going on. Why would Ensign try to pay off the Hamptons? Admission of an affair is damaging but not fatally, IMO. Do the Hamptons have more dirt? Why would Coburn urge Ensign to pay off the Hamptons? Perhaps it was just misguided advice but the more the stories change the more questions get raised.

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    Comments (9)

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    1. Time for the Nevada GOP to get that ‘censure’ resolution ready. That’ll enable Ensign to get his, pardon the expression, ‘do-over’.

      Seriously, just how bad does it have to get for one of these Rethugs to resign? Palin does it b/c she didn’t feel like being Governor any more, and these hypocritical weasels, people that buttressed Ken Starr’s priggish obsessive pursuit of Clinton, circle the wagons.

      Perhaps ‘bulo’s favorite tidbit in this sordid saga is Coburn’s claim that whatever he told Ensign is protected both by clergy/follower privilege and doctor/patient privilege. Coburn is an OB/GYN. Wonder what he was treating Ensign for…

      Oh, and Earth to CNN: The Michael Jackson Funeral is OVER. Maybe you might want to look at this?

    2. anonone says:

      I used you for my own pleasure…

      I feel so cheap.

    3. cassandra_m says:

      What is up with his parents giving this couple money? This is really crazy — his parents paid off one of the parties.

    4. Geezer says:

      “I think something fishy is going on.”

      I suppose you’re grading on the curve, then. I thought a guy banging his best friend’s wife and paying off both ends of the couple was pretty fishy all by itself.

    5. Geezer says:

      Cass — His father is/was a casino big shot, so I’m guessing he’s loaded.

    6. cassandra_m says:

      Even so, there’s not much of the vaunted Personal Responsibility when you are still getting your parents to help clean up your messes for you.

    7. realdeal says:

      Helping to repair the damage done by providing a cushion while they seek other employment is called being honorable. In liberal world that is wierd and suspect.

    8. Progressive Mom says:

      In the real world, $96,000 is real money.

      In the real world, parceling it out in $12,000 segments to avoid gift taxes is real thoughtful.

      In the real world, “providing a cushion” of $96,000 “while they seek employment”, would be honorable and astonishingly generous if the recipient was a relative, your best buddy from the army, or your pastor. Giving that kind of cash to provide a cushion for anyone else is — um — weird and suspect.

      In the real world, if you have an extramarital affair, you deal with the consequences. You don’t ask mommy and daddy to pay for them.

    9. Delaware republican says:

      Let’s ask John Edwards about how to handle a payoff. He is the expert. Plus he knows about cancer.

      Mike Protack