New Yorkers are not, in fact, very impressed by a sex scandal or two, but the almost clownish way Weiner has gone from one silly moment to the next-- and using the alias "Carlos Danger" for his sex videos on the internet-- have made people wonder if he does, in fact, have all his marbles...
Spitzer seemed to have got back into the fray because Weiner tried and at first looked like he might be able to redeem himself in the eyes of the voters of the Big Apple.
People wonder, however, why the former Governor is running for the pedestrian job of Comptroller of the City of New York, which is really sort of dullsville and hardly a stepping stone to any other office..
Well, here is the BBC take on all of this
Anthony Weiner, Eliot Spitzer and the death of shame
Sex
scandals used to doom a politician. Now, they refuse to back down from
evidence of dirty deeds. Have we reached a new age of American politics?
He looks tired and haggard, as if he has not slept or eaten properly for days.
Mired in a scandal of his own making, the 48-year-old former congressman appears close to breaking point, a man at the end of his tether.
His message, though, is defiant - almost comically so in the circumstances.
"Sometimes people say to me, 'this campaign is pretty rough, you may want to quit,'" he reflects.
"Quit isn't the way we roll in New York City. We fight through tough things. We are a tough city. There are people all around New York City who get up in the morning with a pretty tough day ahead of them - and they don't quit."
In many ways, of course, the mayoral candidate is right.
New York is, indeed, a tough city. But it's Weiner, rather than the newspaper editors and politicians whom he criticises for misunderstanding New York, who is surely misreading the city's mood.
It is not so much that voters here are shocked by his behaviour. It is more that they are bewildered. How does Weiner think he can possibly survive a second sex scandal that so closely resembles his first?
As anyone who has walked past a newsstand in New York over the past 10 days knows all too well, the latest Weiner sexting scandal feels like a re-run of the one that forced him to resign from Congress in 2011.
Tabloid reporters, who appear to be paid by the double entendre, have relished in the tawdry details and their effect on his "limp campaign".
There was the graphic, pornographic imagery of the messages he exchanged on a chat site with a young woman. And what of his cartoonish nom de plume Carlos Danger, which could almost have been invented with an impending media feeding frenzy in mind.
What made these details all the more sensational was the timing: Weiner's online affair had started only months after he resigned from office, when he was supposed to be rebuilding his marriage and seeking therapy.
The sin bin: How the candidates match up |
||
---|---|---|
ANTHONY WEINER | ELIOT SPITZER | |
Resigned as US congressman on 16 June 2011 | Date of initial disgrace | Resigned as Governor of New York on 17 March 2008 |
Sent unsolicited photos of his genitals to women over Twitter | Nature of shame | Solicited high-price call girls, caught in prostitution sting |
Initially told reporters he was being set up, then admitted that he "can't say" more photos wouldn't surface | Damning detail | Allegedly left his socks on during intercourse (a charge he denies), accused of being "too rough" |
Announced candidacy for New York City mayor on 21 May 2013 | Back in the game | Announced candidacy for New York City comptroller on 7 July 2013 |
705 | Days in exile | 1,938 |
He has slumped in the polls and his campaign is in disarray. At the weekend, his campaign chief resigned.
His head of communications also made the mistake of becoming a story. Recently she launched into an expletive-laden tirade directed at a former Weiner intern who had revealed behind-the-scenes details to the press.
But Weiner battles on.
'I failed, big time'
Of course, the disgraced former congressman is not the only New Yorker looking to make a political comeback.
Eliot Spitzer, who five years ago resigned as the governor of New York following revelations that he patronised prostitutes, is attempting to become the New York City comptroller, its chief fiscal officer.
Spitzer's campaign has so far gone smoothly, and the polls suggest that voters think he's ripe for rehabilitation.
He served five years in the political sin bin. He is seeking a lesser job. He also conveys what feels like genuine contrition. His second campaign ad was particularly effective.
"Look I failed, big time," he says. "I hurt a lot of people."
Certainly, Americans are more forgiving than they used to be when it comes to sex scandals.
Here, the impeachment of Bill Clinton, following his affair with the White House intern Monica Lewinsky, was a turning point.
By then, Clinton had already dubbed himself the "Comeback Kid" after being runner-up in the 1992 New Hampshire Democratic primary election, weeks after revelations of extra-marital affairs which many believed would finish his presidential ambitions.
Americans also know that some of their most beloved presidents, from Thomas Jefferson to Franklin Delano Roosevelt to John F Kennedy, were sinners rather than saints.
More recently, Mark Sanford has followed the path of forgiveness back into office. After stepping down as governor of South Carolina for his affair with an Argentine woman, he was re-elected as a congressman last year.
As with Spitzer, it helped that he sought a lesser office.
What makes Weiner different is that he's a repeat offender, and he may not have demonstrated sufficient repentance for his sins.
As he vows to continue with his campaign for mayor, he appears to be testing the old adage from the gothic politics of Louisiana: it is possible to survive anything other than waking up with a dead woman or live boy.
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