95°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Ensign back in Senate, stays mum

WASHINGTON — Sen. John Ensign apologized to fellow Republican senators on Tuesday, saying he was sorry he embarrassed the Senate by having an extramarital affair with a family friend who worked for his political organizations.

Ensign spoke for about two minutes during a scheduled weekly luncheon in the Capitol attended by most of the Senate’s 40 Republicans.

When he finished, Ensign was applauded.

The Nevadan was described as being humble and penitent during the closed-door luncheon. He did not go into details of his relationship with Cindy Hampton of Las Vegas and the complications that have grown from it in recent days.

Rather, he acknowledged he made a mistake and expressed contrition that he had brought embarrassment to his family and to the Senate, a number of senators said when they emerged from the meal.

“He apologized and we welcomed him back,” said Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah.

“He was obviously somber and serious,” said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. “This was not a flippant thing that he did.”

A little more than a week ago, Ensign, 51, was in the Senate leadership and was considered a rising star aimed at the top levels of the Republican Party.

On Tuesday, he entered and departed the luncheon through a back door.

Ensign did not comment and was mostly out of sight during his second day back in the Senate.

After acknowledging the affair in Las Vegas on June 16, he stayed at home the rest of the week.

Ensign last Wednesday resigned as chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, the No. 4 leadership post.

It was not yet clear how far to the back bench the scandal might push Ensign in the Senate.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the party’s campaign arm, said he did not know yet what role Ensign might play in helping 2010 GOP candidates in Nevada and elsewhere.

“It is entirely up to him,” Cornyn said.

In Nevada, he added, “We don’t have a candidate yet” to run against Sen. Harry Reid. “When we get a candidate we will see how it goes.”

Senators had no questions for Ensign during lunch. Afterward, a number of them did not want to discuss whether the Nevadan should provide more details of the affair with an employee conducted while the woman’s husband, Doug Hampton, also worked for Ensign as his top administrative aide.

Ensign disclosed the extramarital relationship, which occurred from December 2007 to August 2008, only after believing that Doug Hampton, 47, was about to make it public in the national media, his aides have said.

At the same time, Ensign’s office has said Hampton through an attorney was demanding a large sum of money.

The Las Vegas Sun reported last Friday that Doug Hampton had penned a June 11 letter to the Fox News Channel asking anchorwoman Megyn Kelly for help exposing Ensign.

Hampton said he and his wife “were dismissed” from Ensign’s employ in April 2008, in the midst of the affair.

Cindy Hampton, 46, was treasurer of Ensign’s campaign fund and his personal political action committee, the Battle Born PAC, until the couple left.

Hampton’s salary doubled near the time their relationship commenced.

Ensign’s office has said her job was expanded to include handling direct mail and other added accounting responsibilities.

A watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said it was preparing to file a Senate ethics complaint against Ensign today.

The complaint is expected to urge the Senate to determine if Ensign broke employment law in dealings with the Hamptons.

It also is expected to focus on whether Ensign made any severance payments to Cindy Hampton, which would need to have been reported under election law.

Asked on Tuesday whether Ensign has more to explain, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said: “I think Sen. Ensign will address whatever needs to be said from here on.”

Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., said he did not think Ensign has to answer more questions.

“He expressed great regret, and I think it was sincere and people deserve the opportunity to say I am sorry and move on,” Martinez said.

Corker said Ensign was applauded for how he has acknowledged his indiscretions.

“From what I have seen in Washington, I think he has been very stand-up about it,” Corker said. “Look, he made a mistake, he said he made a mistake, and he is very apologetic for that at every appropriate level.

“Today he did what he needed to do for us.”

Ensign called Reid on Tuesday morning, a Reid spokesman said. Details of the call could not be learned. The two spoke several times last week when news of the affair was emerging, Reid's spokesman said.

Reid and Ensign boast a strong friendship.

Later in the day Tuesday, Reid limited his comments about Ensign when asked about him by reporters.

Reid said he still considered Ensign a friend, and was hoping the fellow Nevadan would recover.

“I am concerned about his family, and I hope he works his way through this,” Reid said.

 

Contact Stephens Washington Bureau Chief Steve Tetreault at stetreault@stephensmedia.com or 202-783-1760.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
MORE STORIES