After weeks of accusations of sexual harassment from a number of women, and after his local Democratic party leadership overwhelmingly asked him to resign, San Diego Mayor Bob Filner said he will enter therapy–but not resign.
During a press conference on Friday, Filner said that beginning Aug. 5, he will enter a 2-week intensive therapy program.
“Words alone are not enough,” he said. “I am responsible for my conduct and I must take responsibility for my actions.” Filner called his actions “wrong” and “inexcusable” and said he has reached out to apologize to the women he has offended.
Filner said the counseling was just the first step in a continuing program, but insisted he would return to office on Aug. 19. “I must become a better person,” the mayor said, adding he hopes that someday he will be forgiven. “I need to demonstrate my behavior has changed.”
The mayor began a press conference around 3 p.m. EST but he was cut off abruptly when the audio cut out. He left the podium only to return a few minutes later and start his speech again.
For nearly two weeks, the 70-year-old Democrat has refused to call it quits in the face of sexual harassment allegations , even after four additional women have stepped forward to accuse Filner of various sexual advances. But the mayor is making this stand alone: Even his own party said it’s time for him to step down.
While the sex scandals surrounding other former lawmakers trying to make political comebacks have been swirling in national headlines in recent months–Mark Sanford, Anthony Weiner, Eliot Spitzer–the accusations against Filner are particularly jaw-dropping because of the seriousness of the allegations and the number of women–seven–who have come forward.
Filner’s former director of communications, Irene McCormack Johnson, filed a lawsuit seeking unspecified damages for how the former congressman treated her. She claims that he put her in a headlock, demanded kisses, and even suggested she come to work without her underwear on. This is not just sexting and infidelity–the accusations against Filner are potentially far more serious.
On Thursday, before the San Diego County Democratic Party Central Committee voted 34-6 to call on the mayor and 10-term congressman to resign, Filner asked those in the country’s eighth largest city and second largest in the state to merely “take a deep breath, let that process work itself out. Meanwhile, we got a city to run.”
When allegations first surfaced in mid-July, Filner released a video on YouTube, apologizing for his “inappropriate and wrong” behavior, and said he was working with “professionals” to fix the problem. The mayor, however, refused to acknowledge he sexually harassed anyone.
Filner, who is less than eight months into a four-year term, did not return requests for comment on Friday.
Francine Busby, the chair of San Diego County’s Democratic Party, told msnbc.com that Democrats have told her office that it’s “time for the mayor to step down, take the time he needs to get help and for the city to move forward.” According to city rules, in order for the mayor to be dumped, he must resign or be recalled, which has a high threshold. “If the mayor doesn’t step down, we hope he’ll get the help he needs,” said Busby.









