NY’s hooker-scandal ex-Gov. Eliot Spitzer talks about today’s accused politicians in rare chat
Put a sock in it, Eliot.
Ex-New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer claims today’s voters are more tolerant about supporting scandal-scarred candidates than when he resigned in an explosive hooker scandal in 2008 and futilely attempted a comeback five years later.
Spitzer — asked about voters being more forgiving after returning accused sex-assaulter President Trump to office and given the comeback mayoral candidacy of alleged sex-harasser former Gov. Andrew Cuomo — told Vanity Fair in a rare interview, “This will sound odd coming from me perhaps, but unfortunately, yes, probably.
“I think voters are a bit calloused now to the personal failings of candidates,” said the 66-year-old disgraced pol — who allegedly liked to keep on his black dress socks, and nothing else, while dallying with his favorite hooker as “Client No. 9.”
“And so, a bit more tolerant, or they look to other issues to determine their vote,” he said of today’s constituents. “Some of the issues that were outcome-determinative 15, 20, 30 years ago no longer are.”
