First it was disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner who re-entered New York’s political fray, claiming he was a changed man seeking forgiveness. And for a while, his chances of redemption seemed almost possible: The Democrat managed to lead a crowded candidate field in a bid for city mayor. But whispers of a comeback crashed and burned amid revelations that the self-proclaimed “changed man” remained tarnished for the same reasons that got him in trouble in the first place.
Later it was Eliot Spitzer, the disgraced former New York governor, who thought he would “do something positive” after he resigned in shame over his involvement in a high-end prostitution ring. Spitzer said he was ready to take his tough-on-Wall Street reputation to a position that holds little fanfare: leading the New York City comptroller’s office. And polls originally suggested that a majority of Democrats were willing to support the former governor who spent 10 times the amount on his campaign over his rival.
But New York City voters on Tuesday cut short both men’s redemption tours, offering instead a resounding rejection to any political comeback. Weiner received a humiliating 5% of the votes in the Democratic mayoral primary, finishing in fifth place. Spitzer ultimately lost 52-48% in the comptroller race to Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer—a relatively unknown name outside of the city compared to Spitzer.
“We have the best ideas. Sadly, I was an imperfect messenger,” Weiner said during his concession speech Monday night.
Weiner’s and Spitzer’s stories were just part of the comeback narrative painted over 2013 after former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, who famously lied about his whereabouts in 2009 while visiting his mistress in Argentina, won a special election congressional race in May. Alongside Sanford in the “comeback kid” ring is Louisiana Sen. David Vitter, who was caught in the 2007 D.C. Madam scandal before eventually succeeding in a 2010 re-election bid. Vitter’s name is currently being tossed around as a possible Louisiana gubernatorial nominee in 2015.
But Sanford and Vitter had something that neither Weiner nor Spitzer had in their races: Support from their party.
“The difference,” Democratic strategist and MSNBC contributor Jimmy Williams said, “is that the South Carolina leadership came out in support for [Sanford].” Current South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley appeared alongside Sanford at fundraisers and publicly threw her support behind her predecessor, as did Sens. Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott.
“But did Bloomberg come out in support? Did Chuck Schumer? Kirsten Gillibrand?” Williams asked of New York’s prominent lawmakers.









