The Lincoln Project has condemned John Weaver, a co-founder of the anti-Trump Republican group who is alleged to have made unsolicited sexual overtures to males as young as 14.
Weaver, 61, is a Republican consultant who worked with presidential candidates John McCain and John Kasich. His alleged online comments to young men were reported in mid-January by the American Conservative and Scott Stedman, an independent reporter who said he received messages from Weaver, data analyst Garrett Herrin and Axios.
Then, Weaver said: “The truth is that I’m gay. And that I have a wife and two kids who I love. My inability to reconcile those two truths has led to this agonizing place.
“To the men I made uncomfortable through my messages that I viewed as consensual mutual conversations at the time: I am truly sorry. They were inappropriate and it was because of my failings that this discomfort was brought on you.”
He also said he would not return to the Lincoln Project after a period of medical leave.
But on Sunday, the New York Times published a report based on interviews with 21 men, one of whom it said Weaver messaged when the man was 14, “asking questions about his body while he was still in high school and then more pointed ones after he turned 18”. Weaver did not comment.
In a statement, the Project said: “John Weaver led a secret life that was built on a foundation of deception at every level. He is a predator, a liar, and an abuser. We extend our deepest sympathies to those who were targeted by his deplorable and predatory behavior.”
With mere hours left before a deadline for Donald Trump to officially answer the impeachment charge against him, the former president is still scrambling to assemble a legal defense, announcing that he has hired two new lawyers after a five-person team abruptly quit their roles.
Trump has until noon on Tuesday to reply to a charge of incitement of insurrection, for encouraging the assault on the US Capitol on 6 January in which five people died. His trial in the Senate is scheduled to begin on 9 February.
With most Republicans signaling support for the former president, the trial is seen as having little chance of ending in conviction, which would open the way for the Senate to bar Trump, 74, from ever holding office again.
But the trial is still seen as a potentially explosive disruption in Washington, where the Biden administration is laboring mightily to get its agenda off the ground and some Republican leaders have been attempting to creep away from Trump.
Read the full report:
A fascinating report from Politico says Democrats under House majority leader Steny Hoyer are set to give Republican minority leader Kevin McCarthy 72 hours to take meaningful action against Marjorie Taylor Greene, or they will kick the QAnon-supporting, conspiracy spouting Georgia congresswoman off her committee assignments themselves.
Here’s a taste of the triple-bylined report:
The move comes amid intense fury within the Democratic caucus over Greene’s incendiary rhetoric, including peddling conspiracy theories that the nation’s deadliest mass shootings were staged. Greene also endorsed violence against Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other top Democrats before she was elected to Congress.
Last week, Greene was officially awarded seats on the education and labor Committee and the budget committee. Republicans have been slow to act, with McCarthy saying only he’s planning to have a ‘conversation’ with Greene some time this week. And Greene has shown zero contrition.
The report goes on to say initial attempts to remove Greene’s committee assignments will stop short of moving for censure or expulsion, but that those options are on the table too.
Jahana Haynes, a Connecticut Democrat who represents the site of the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting, told reporters on Monday: “If we are waiting for Kevin McCarthy to have a moral compass … that’s never going to happen.” Hayes also said Greene’s “elevation in the party is dangerous”.
At the weekend, Greene said she had spoken to Donald Trump. The former president had offered his full support, she said. Here’s some further reading from Joan E Greve, steward of this blog, about what all this says about the Republican party and its immediate future: