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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Will 'Mayor Naughty' please step down?
Wednesday, August 21, 2013 3:32 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:As much of the country deals with heat waves, the temperature in this coastal city rarely exceeds 75 degrees. Don't you want to be in San Diego? Really? You might want to re-think that. It's not a good time. The circus came to town several weeks ago, and now it refuses to leave. One of America's finest cities is being held hostage. What are we supposed to do? Call the mayor? That won't do any good. He's the one holding us hostage. Bob Filner, national punchline and catnip for late-night talk show hosts, has been accused of sexual harassment, inappropriate touching, lewd comments and other boorish behavior by -- at last count -- 16 women. The last person to accuse him of making inappropriate comments -- apparently about his sexual stamina -- was a 67-year-old great-grandmother. I had snarkily predicted that we'd get to 20 women by Labor Day. Now, the way it's been going, we could hit that figure by the end of business today. The 70-year-old is no longer just a weirdo with what he admits is a problem (he recently underwent what we are assured was intensive behavioral therapy). In recent days, it's been revealed that he's a first-class narcissist who wants to lead this city so badly that it is of little concern to him that very few people still want to follow. Forget that, like most politicians, he rode into office on assurances that he was doing it all to help the less fortunate. Now we know the truth: It's all about Bob. Most of his supporters have deserted him. A new poll shows about 80% of San Diegans want him to resign. A recall effort has begun with volunteers hoping to collect more than 100,000 signatures by September 26. And all the while, Mayor Naughty fiddles. Filner isn't exactly cleaning out his office. He doesn't seem to care what anyone thinks about him. He won't leave, and it might just be that -- even with all the pressure being applied -- we can't make him leave. Even if Filner is recalled, he's likely to challenge the legality of the action. After all, he could argue, he's innocent until proven guilty. Where is his due process? Don't be surprised if some Republicans start saying the same thing. They'd like to drag this sordid affair out as long as possible. Since the beginning of this soap opera by the sea, the loudest voices clamoring for Filner to leave have belonged to his fellow Democrats. Even the Democratic National Committee is ratcheting up pressure on the mayor with a vote on a resolution planned this week calling on him to resign. How embarrassing are the Filner follies? Try this on for size: Hooters restaurants in San Diego have banned the mayor because, according to the management, Filner doesn't respect women. What do you do when you're deemed morally deficient by a restaurant chain that made a fortune off the concept of waitresses serving up hot wings in tight shorts and cleavage-baring T-shirts? In Filner's case, you go on with business as usual. You ignore calls to step down, from the entire San Diego City Council and a host of elected officials, including Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer of California. This week, the mayor ducked into a downtown office building for settlement talks with Irene McCormack Jackson, his former communications director, and her lawyer Gloria Allred. McCormack Jackson, who was the first woman to publicly accuse Filner of wrongdoing, has filed a lawsuit claiming the mayor told her to work without panties, tried to kiss her, told her he wanted to see her naked and put her in a headlock. One of the issues still unresolved is just who would pay a settlement if one were reached -- Filner or the city? City officials have made it clear they aren't eager to foot the bill for Filner's alleged misbehavior, but they seem to be keeping that door open if it will help get the embattled mayor into an early retirement. Have mercy on the hostages. Great weather notwithstanding, at the moment, it's hard to imagine that any city in America is more uncomfortable than this one. http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/21/opinion/navarrette-filner/index.html?hpt=hp_bn7
Wednesday, August 21, 2013 7:56 AM
Quote:Bob Filner's Bleak Future More than a month after being accused of sexual harassment and days after leaving treatment meant to address his alleged misconduct, San Diego Mayor Bob Filner still won’t go. But that may be changing soon. Since early July, 16 women have accused the first-term Democrat of inappropriate behavior. The first was his former communications director, who filed a sexual-harassment lawsuit against him and the city through prominent women’s-rights attorney Gloria Allred. Then came a school psychologist, a Navy rear admiral and a great-grandmother. The sheriff created a hotline to field allegations, while a steady stream of critics, from local politicians to Nancy Pelosi, called on him to resign. The Democratic National Committee joined the chorus Tuesday when it revealed plans to vote on a resolution asking the former Congressman to step down. So far, the mayor has been firm in resisting those calls. After citizens of San Diego declared their intention to circulate a recall petition, he responded without a hint of capitulation. “As your mayor,” he wrote in a statement released by his lawyers, “I am committed to moving San Diego forward!” Filner might change his tune if his lawyers, who have been in closed-door mediation sessions with Allred and city officials, broker a deal that makes stepping down look like the most appealing option. “Filner is a tough, shrewd bargainer,” says Steve Erie, a political-science professor at the University of California, San Diego. “And he has the one thing everybody wants.” Erie believes that the mayor might be willing to leave his office if the city indemnifies him against charges of sexual misconduct. Filner’s exit would lift a humiliating cloud that has been hovering over the usually sunny coastal city since the allegations surfaced. After seeing the mayor lampooned on late-night shows and in spoof music videos, many residents have had their fill of the spotlight. “People are definitely frustrated,” says Katie Keach, an aide to city-council president Todd Gloria, an official involved in the mediation talks who has called for Filner to step down. “They want it to go away.” Erie describes the mood in the nation’s eighth largest city with starker terms: “There is a lynch-mob mentality in this town.” A resignation would be a far simpler and quicker way to resolve things than a recall election. An official recall effort began with a rally on Sunday, and organizers have until Sept. 26 to gather nearly 102,000 signatures if they want to put the issue on the ballot anytime soon. Some 800 volunteers are circulating petitions, but the tight time frame creates a high bar — the state, by contrast, gives recall petitioners 160 days. A bigger problem may be a detail in the municipal code that makes recall elections open to legal challenges. Though the city council is hurrying to amend the code, the recall process could get messy and would certainly take months to move forward. There is a possible third avenue, buried in another corner of the city code, which allows for city officials to be removed if they have misused city funds. The San Diego city attorney will soon be presenting related evidence to the city council; media reports have circulated allegations that Filner used a city-issued credit card to buy himself expensive meals and a blender. Land-use deals Filner hatched are also being put under the microscope. The council will likely vote next week on whether to go forward with this tack, which could also get caught up in judicial appeals and red tape. Filner has admitted to wrongdoing, but his biggest act of penance thus far was taking a hiatus for intensive behavioral rehab. He was due to return to work on Aug. 19 but has been in mediation the past two days. When he emerges, the city will find out if he’s had a change of heart. http://swampland.time.com/2013/08/21/amid-recall-push-san-diego-mayor-bob-filner-negotiates-next-steps/#ixzz2ccrN7t6I]
Thursday, August 22, 2013 6:39 AM
Quote:Tentative Deal in San Diego Mayor Harassment Suit Embattled San Diego Mayor Bob Filner on Wednesday reached a tentative deal involving a sexual harassment lawsuit filed against him — but details were not made public, including whether settlement hinged on the former congressman resigning. City Attorney Jan Goldsmith announced an agreement had been struck at the end of three days of talks. He said the proposed resolution will be presented to the City Council during closed session Friday, and if approved the members could go into open session. Analysts have speculated Filner might have negotiated a deal that would shed his financial liability in the lawsuit in exchange for his resignation. http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/san-diego-mayor-faces-pressure-democrats-20020102
Thursday, August 22, 2013 7:20 AM
STORYMARK
Thursday, August 22, 2013 1:13 PM
Quote:Bob Filner To Resign Friday SAN DIEGO -- Mayor Bob Filner will resign from office as part of a mediation deal reached in his sexual harassment lawsuit, sources familiar with the negotiations said Thursday. Filner's decision to resign comes after three days of closed-door mediation and after six weeks of scandal in the city. At least 18 women have publicly accused Filner of sexual harassment, including one former aide who filed the lawsuit. In exchange for his resignation, the city will pay some, if not all, of Filner’s share of any damages awarded in the lawsuit, said the sources, who spoke on the condition anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The City Council is set to vote on the settlement in a closed session Friday. http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-bob-filner-resign-20130822,0,4593290.story
Friday, August 23, 2013 1:05 PM
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