Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
Showing Original Post only (View all)The Case of Al Franken by Jane Mayer [View all]
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/07/29/the-case-of-al-franken

Last month, in Minneapolis, I climbed the stairs of a row house to find Al Franken, Minnesotas disgraced former senator, wandering around in jeans and stocking feet. It was a sunny day, but the shades were mostly drawn. Takeout containers of hummus and carrot sticks were set out on the kitchen table. His wife, Franni Bryson, was stuck in their apartment in Washington, D.C., with a cold, and he had evidently done the best he could to be hospitable. But the place felt like the kind of man cave where someone hides out from the world, which is more or less what Franken has been doing since he resigned, in December, 2017, amid accusations of sexual impropriety.
<snip>
At his house, Franken said he understood that, in such an atmosphere, the public might not be eager to hear his grievances. Holding his head in his hands, he said, I dont think people who have been sexually assaulted, and those kinds of things, want to hear from people who have been #MeTood that theyre victims. Yet, he added, being on the losing side of the #MeToo movement, which he fervently supports, has led him to spend time thinking about such matters as due process, proportionality of punishment, and the consequences of Internet-fuelled outrage. He told me that his therapist had likened his experience to what happens when primates are shunned and humiliated by the rest of the other primates. Their reaction, Franken said, with a mirthless laugh, is Im going to die alone in the jungle.
<snip>
When I asked him if he truly regretted his decision to resign, he said, Oh, yeah. Absolutely. He wishes that he had appeared before a Senate Ethics Committee hearing, as he had requested, allowing him to marshal facts that countered the narrative aired in the press. It is extremely rare for a senator to resign under pressure. No senator has been expelled since the Civil War, and in modern times only three have resigned under the threat of expulsion: Harrison Williams, in 1982, Bob Packwood, in 1995, and John Ensign, in 2011. Williams resigned after he was convicted of bribery and conspiracy; Packwood faced numerous sexual-assault accusations; Ensign was accused of making illegal payoffs to hide an affair.
<snip>
Franken wasnt the only one. Two actresses who had performed the same role as Tweeden on earlier U.S.O. tours with him, Karri Turner and Traylor Portman, immediately recognized that Tweeden was wrong to say that Franken had written the part in order to kiss her. Both women told me that they fully supported the #MeToo movement and could speak only to their own experiences. But Turner confirmed that she had acted in the same skit in 2003. Video footage of her performing it, which can be seen online, shows that the script was altered for Tweeden only by cutting references to JAG, a TV show in which Turner starred. In a statement, Turner said that no woman should have to deal with any type of harassment, ever! But on her two U.S.O. tours with Franken, she said, there was nothing inappropriate toward me, adding, I only experienced a person that was eager to make soldiers laugh.
Traylor Portman, who used her maiden name, Traylor Howard, while appearing on the TV show Monk, said that she also played the role in Frankens skit, in 2005. Its not accurate for her to say it was written for her, Portman told me. She had rehearsed the kissing scene with Franken, and hadnt objected, because youre going to practicethats what professionals do. She said that the scene involved what looked like kissing but wasnt, adding, Its just for comic relief. I guess you could turn your head, but whateverits nothing. I was in sitcoms. You just play it for laughs.
Portman went on, I get the whole #MeToo thing, and a whole lot of horrible stuff has happened, and it needed to change. But thats not what was happening here. She added, Franken is a good man. I remember him talking so sweetly and lovingly about his wife. Portman recalled, There were Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders there, and he didnt pay any special attention to them. He had a good rapport with everyone. He was hilarious. He was just trying to get them to laugh. It was about entertaining people who were risking their lives. Asked about the allegation that Franken drew devil horns on Tweedens head shot, Portman said, It doesnt sound out of line for himbut please. To get offended by that sounds ridiculous, like fourth grade.
</snip>

Last month, in Minneapolis, I climbed the stairs of a row house to find Al Franken, Minnesotas disgraced former senator, wandering around in jeans and stocking feet. It was a sunny day, but the shades were mostly drawn. Takeout containers of hummus and carrot sticks were set out on the kitchen table. His wife, Franni Bryson, was stuck in their apartment in Washington, D.C., with a cold, and he had evidently done the best he could to be hospitable. But the place felt like the kind of man cave where someone hides out from the world, which is more or less what Franken has been doing since he resigned, in December, 2017, amid accusations of sexual impropriety.
<snip>
At his house, Franken said he understood that, in such an atmosphere, the public might not be eager to hear his grievances. Holding his head in his hands, he said, I dont think people who have been sexually assaulted, and those kinds of things, want to hear from people who have been #MeTood that theyre victims. Yet, he added, being on the losing side of the #MeToo movement, which he fervently supports, has led him to spend time thinking about such matters as due process, proportionality of punishment, and the consequences of Internet-fuelled outrage. He told me that his therapist had likened his experience to what happens when primates are shunned and humiliated by the rest of the other primates. Their reaction, Franken said, with a mirthless laugh, is Im going to die alone in the jungle.
<snip>
When I asked him if he truly regretted his decision to resign, he said, Oh, yeah. Absolutely. He wishes that he had appeared before a Senate Ethics Committee hearing, as he had requested, allowing him to marshal facts that countered the narrative aired in the press. It is extremely rare for a senator to resign under pressure. No senator has been expelled since the Civil War, and in modern times only three have resigned under the threat of expulsion: Harrison Williams, in 1982, Bob Packwood, in 1995, and John Ensign, in 2011. Williams resigned after he was convicted of bribery and conspiracy; Packwood faced numerous sexual-assault accusations; Ensign was accused of making illegal payoffs to hide an affair.
<snip>
Franken wasnt the only one. Two actresses who had performed the same role as Tweeden on earlier U.S.O. tours with him, Karri Turner and Traylor Portman, immediately recognized that Tweeden was wrong to say that Franken had written the part in order to kiss her. Both women told me that they fully supported the #MeToo movement and could speak only to their own experiences. But Turner confirmed that she had acted in the same skit in 2003. Video footage of her performing it, which can be seen online, shows that the script was altered for Tweeden only by cutting references to JAG, a TV show in which Turner starred. In a statement, Turner said that no woman should have to deal with any type of harassment, ever! But on her two U.S.O. tours with Franken, she said, there was nothing inappropriate toward me, adding, I only experienced a person that was eager to make soldiers laugh.
Traylor Portman, who used her maiden name, Traylor Howard, while appearing on the TV show Monk, said that she also played the role in Frankens skit, in 2005. Its not accurate for her to say it was written for her, Portman told me. She had rehearsed the kissing scene with Franken, and hadnt objected, because youre going to practicethats what professionals do. She said that the scene involved what looked like kissing but wasnt, adding, Its just for comic relief. I guess you could turn your head, but whateverits nothing. I was in sitcoms. You just play it for laughs.
Portman went on, I get the whole #MeToo thing, and a whole lot of horrible stuff has happened, and it needed to change. But thats not what was happening here. She added, Franken is a good man. I remember him talking so sweetly and lovingly about his wife. Portman recalled, There were Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders there, and he didnt pay any special attention to them. He had a good rapport with everyone. He was hilarious. He was just trying to get them to laugh. It was about entertaining people who were risking their lives. Asked about the allegation that Franken drew devil horns on Tweedens head shot, Portman said, It doesnt sound out of line for himbut please. To get offended by that sounds ridiculous, like fourth grade.
</snip>
MUCH more at link.
308 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
we don't do it to ourselves. we let limbaugh and sons do it to good people all day long
certainot
Jul 2019
#85
thanks. any dem that asks mueller if he saw evidence russians were using talk radio or
certainot
Jul 2019
#139
The entire thing was a Roger Stone ratfuck hit job. I hope Stone gets convicted and rots in prison.
Texin
Jul 2019
#136
This article is truly wrenching. Those who defended the rail-roading of Franken REALLY
hlthe2b
Jul 2019
#2
Well Bill, Tammy, Heidi, Angus, Jeff, Tom, Harry and Patrick, that's nice . . ..
hatrack
Jul 2019
#5
Laughably incorrect. Gillibrand is a junior senator. Schumer was the minority leader.
yardwork
Jul 2019
#39
Don't be condescending. We all know who is Senate minority leader, yet Gillibrand LED the effort.
hlthe2b
Jul 2019
#40
I didn't mean to be condescending. It's just that Schumer needs to be held accountable.
yardwork
Jul 2019
#54
Yep!! And,Republicans STILL laughing their azzzz off on how EASY this was to pull off
Bengus81
Jul 2019
#272
I agree. "Stampeded" is the perfect word to describe what was taking place: herd mentality.
Demit
Jul 2019
#106
opportunist KG lost me too when she used this opp to paint herself as a champion for women.
onetexan
Jul 2019
#8
Ironically, she could have gained even more popularity if she had called for the Ethics investigatio
RVN VET71
Jul 2019
#150
i hate how the author described him as "disgraced" - he was railroaded, but not disgraced.
onetexan
Jul 2019
#6
exactly Cha. A good man and a great Dem leader was done in by another politician for expediency.
onetexan
Jul 2019
#135
For me its unforgivable. And I am glad I will miss the oportunity to vote ...
marble falls
Jul 2019
#59
After writing several still-very-angry paragraphs I decided to repeat your post...
Guilded Lilly
Jul 2019
#77
Thank you for posting that. That last paragraph should immediately end Gillibrand's campaign
drbtg1
Jul 2019
#144
Yes...he did, and it's why I won't vote for the gaggle that fell for Stone's sucker bet. nt
Baltimike
Jul 2019
#78
I hope they learned, too, but I doubt it. It looked like a replay of "Julius Caesar."
DFW
Jul 2019
#69
If I were him, I wouldn't want to be back with the people who threw me under the bus.
catrose
Jul 2019
#242
He should start a nationally syndicated Talk Show that specifically talks about trends
Blue_true
Jul 2019
#270
Who cares what repubs think or do! Dont we know by now that in the absence of
Kashkakat v.2.0
Jul 2019
#134
ONE QUESTION...Where is the Me Too movement on the RAPIST in the oval????????????
Zoonart
Jul 2019
#60
Franken had far more serious allegations against him than Tweeden the right-wing hack
Tarc
Jul 2019
#67
Why is a woman who complained that a man's arm around her waist made her uncomfortable because
Demit
Jul 2019
#110
Yes, as I recall she was the only non-Republican who wasn't "anonymous" who accused him,
deurbano
Jul 2019
#138
And yet you, rightly, supported the accusations, pre-investigation, against Kavanaugh, right?
Tarc
Jul 2019
#125
and I am sorry that you don't support a person is innocent until proven guilty
Baltimike
Jul 2019
#286
The one accuser that has HER arm around Franken for a picture--that allegation?
Bengus81
Jul 2019
#250
Think how valuable an active, office-holding Al Franken would be to us, right now.
Paladin
Jul 2019
#79
I pray this extensive, well-written article shepherds his re-entry into office.
Dennis Donovan
Jul 2019
#80
CAN HE NOT run and win again? What am I missing - I mean if Anthony effing Weiner can
Kashkakat v.2.0
Jul 2019
#82
Right. There are two Senators for every state and MN's are now filled by Dems Klobuchar and
hlthe2b
Jul 2019
#132
My fantasy is that Franken returns to the Senate when Klobuchar is appointed AG
The Velveteen Ocelot
Jul 2019
#255
After he resigned: "Gillibrand and other Senate colleagues flocked to hug him..."
catrose
Jul 2019
#105
What happened was that Franken made some of his other colleagues look bad by doing such a good job
PoliticAverse
Jul 2019
#179
She said that any time she saw Franken afterward her hands "clenched into fists."
Demit
Jul 2019
#159
I'm reading the article and it sounds like Franken was railroaded more than I previously
Vinca
Jul 2019
#176
Gillibrand Can Attribute Much of Her Primary Failure To Her Treatment of Al Franken.
Indykatie
Jul 2019
#177
I called her office and warned them that grassroots Democratic activists will never ever forgive her
Princetonian
Jul 2019
#188
"I'm going to die alone in the jungle" Amazing how far back in evolutionary terms mob violence goes
Hekate
Jul 2019
#194
I'm glad she wrote this article, but I hate how she characterizes him in the opening.
femmedem
Jul 2019
#223
Just finished. Now I'm more pissed than the day he was forced out of the senate.
IADEMO2004
Jul 2019
#277
I am so ashamed of the Dems. We are entering a new puritanism on our side of the aisle...
Hekate
Jul 2019
#289
I've heard a lot about Franken since I live in WI just across the Mississippi from MN.
elocs
Jul 2019
#301