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Bauer: I am not a slut! | page 1, 2
"I have complete confidence in Gary that he is and has always been a completely faithful husband and father," Moloney says. "There are people out to destroy him, [but] the one rumor that I never think would stick would be that one." The aide, Moloney added, is "a great lady, someone I'm proud to call a friend. And she's being very strong. If you asked her about this, her first reaction would be to laugh. If it wasn't so serious -- the type of effect this can have on someone's reputation and someone's campaign -- I think we'd all be laughing." Moloney's steadfast support notwithstanding, the rumor found some all- But regardless of how fast and furious the juice spilled throughout D.C. -- and how many lapped it up -- Bauer said he was only prompted to act after the rumors trickled to the public through the syndicated radio talk show hosted by Don Imus. On Tuesday, Imus and Newsweek's Howard Fineman discussed the rumor published in the New York Daily News that an unnamed GOP candidate was having an affair. "Wouldn't it be great if it were" Bauer? Imus asked. It was then, Bauer explained at his press conference, that he felt compelled to come forward publicly "to defend my honor and my family ... If you don't deny something, people will think in this town that it's true. That would be devastating to me ... my wife ... [and] to my children. I had to put all political calculations aside ... I had to think about the four people I love the most." Ironically, the media reports of the rumors were nothing compared to what the coverage will now be of his denial. Bauer's Nixonian speech is reminiscent of the time that former Sen. Bill Scott held a press conference after a magazine named him one of the dumbest members of Congress. Scott denied the silly charges -- which no one had taken very seriously until he showed his political ineptitude by holding the press conference. "This is what I've had to wrestle with for weeks," Bauer said in response to a question about the possibility of giving the rumor more play by hosting the packed press conference. "I feel like I've been boxing a ghost ... I would like to be president of the United States. But not at the expense of having the record I have as a father and as a husband being undermined by this kind of just-ridiculous charge." Recent developments have lent credence to the charge, however, including the exodus of campaign aides from the Bauer ranks. When former Bauer national chairman Charles Jarvis resigned in mid-September, Bauer's aides started speculating that his departure had something to do with the rumors. Jarvis and Bauer had been friends for 16 years, sharing the same conservative Christian beliefs; before joining the campaign, Jarvis had served as executive vice president of Dobson's socially conservative Focus on the Family. In the internal campaign memo announcing his departure, which was released to the media, Jarvis wrote that he was leaving the campaign because he didn't think Bauer had a chance to win. But some people close to the campaign say that rationale just doesn't add up. "Jarvis is a true-believer Christian activist -- these are the kinds of people who think 'pragmatism' is a dirty word," says a Bauer campaign source. "For him to say he's leaving because Bauer doesn't have a chance to win doesn't pass the straight-face test." Besides Jarvis, media consultant Tom Edmonds has left Bauer's campaign, as has Bauer's secretary of 15 years, Betty Barrett. Jarvis, Edmonds and Barrett all declined to comment. In a chicken- Some say that the resignations have more to do with Bauer's harsh persona than with his sexual persona. "There's a lot of people who aren't happy," says the Bauer campaign source. "It has a lot to do with [Bauer's] personality. He's just never happy, never satisfied. He doesn't believe his team is doing enough for him. He says, 'What's wrong with these people?' He can't grasp that he only has 5 percent name recognition. He's totally unrealistic." Near the end of the 45-minute press conference, Bauer was asked which offended him more, "the rumors about your personal life or some of the more borderline anti-Semitic, racist and xenophobic things [GOP rival] Pat Buchanan has said." In recent days, GOP candidates Forbes, Elizabeth Dole and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., have all condemned Buchanan's new book, "A Republic, Not An Empire," in which he argues that the United States had no compelling reason to fight the Nazis in World War II, and that Jews exert undue influence in American politics. "Well, the thing that bothers me the most, of course, is any personal attacks on my honor or my character or my family," Bauer said. "I think any human being would react that way. I'm not going to comment on your characterization of Pat Buchanan's views. But I have spoken out my entire life on bigotry of all sorts."
Additional reporting contributed by Washington journalist Susan Crabtree.
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