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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<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>