Former New York City mayoral candidate and congressman speculated that he probably would have been elected mayor “if the Internet didn’t exist.” A series of online lewd exchanges with women forced him to resign from Congress and killed his mayoral campaign.
“Maybe if the Internet didn’t exist? Like, if I was running in 1955? I’d probably get elected mayor,” Weiner said in a profile piece entitled “The Year of Living Carlos Dangerously” for GQ magazine.
The disgraced congressman first became embroiled in a scandal in May 2011 when suggestive photos were revealed on Twitter; he resigned the following month. After telling the press he was no longer engaging with other women online, a second scandal became public in June 2013, several months into the city’s mayoral race.
In the GQ interview, Weiner acknowledged that the reputation of his wife, Huma Abedin, was tarnished after both scandals.
The media’s scandal coverage zeroed in on his wife, who is one of Hillary Clinton’s closest aides.
“We’ve had a very rough time. It causes me a great deal of pain in the way she gets reported and the way she gets discussed. Her treatment in the press has been rough. It pains me because I deserve it. She doesn’t,” Weiner said.
“I duck it as best I can,” Weiner said. “But her reputation has become the Woman Who Married an Idiot and Stuck with Him. More of it rolls off my back, because that’s the way I am constitutionally. She’s more sensitive.”
“I’m just an empty, soulless vessel, so it doesn’t hurt me as much,” Weiner told GQ.
Weiner used the pseudonym “Carlos Danger” to send lewd online messages to a woman named Sydney Leathers.









