Lincoln Project enveloped in scandal over
harassment allegations
Anti-Trump group said John Weaver’s conduct was
‘appalling’ and tweeted messages between journalist and Jennifer Horn
Martin
Pengelly in New York
@MartinPengelly
Fri 12 Feb
2021 17.34 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/12/john-weaver-lincoln-project-allegations
After the
publication on Thursday of further revelations about a founder member who
sexually harassed gay men, the anti-Trump conservative Lincoln Project
acknowledged what it called a “central truth”: that John Weaver’s conduct was
“appalling” and that he “abused” some who sought work with the group.
But it also
continued to deny mishandling the allegations. Responding to reports by the
Associated Press, New York magazine, the New York Times and other outlets, the
group said: “Recently published stories about the Lincoln Project are filled
with inaccuracies, incorrect information, and reliant exclusively on anonymous
sources.”
The group
also said it had retained “a best-in-class outside professional to review Mr
Weaver’s tenure with the organisation and to establish both accountability and
best practices going forward”, and would not comment further.
On Thursday
night, however, the group published on its Twitter feed private messages
between a journalist and a founding member, the New Hampshire Republican
Jennifer Horn.
The Lincoln
Project’s message said: “Earlier this evening, we became aware that Amanda
Becker of The 19th news was preparing to publish a smear job on the Lincoln
Project with the help of [Horn]. You hear a lot of talk about hit jobs in
journalism, but rarely do you get to see their origin story. Enjoy.”
Messages
between Becker and Horn were attached. The messages were soon deleted. Horn,
who denies the Lincoln Project’s contention that she left over a financial
dispute, said she did not consent to have her messages published and alerted
Twitter.
Responding
to the Lincoln Project’s complaint about the sourcing of reports about Weaver,
Becker tweeted: “Sources discussing the inner workings of an organisation tend
to be anonymous when interns to senior management sign NDAs at an
organisation’s behest.”
In its
statement, the Lincoln Project said “any person who believes they are unable to
talk about John Weaver publicly because they are bound by an NDA should contact
the Lincoln Project for a release”. In an open letter provided to the New York
Times, four former members of the group did so.
Like other
Lincoln Project founders including Rick Wilson, George Conway and Steve
Schmidt, Weaver, 61, is a veteran of Republican politics, in his case having
worked with John McCain and John Kasich among other prominent figures.
He did not
comment about the new reports about his behaviour towards young men. Earlier
this year, he said in a statement: “The truth is that I’m gay. And that I have
a wife and two kids who I love. My inability to reconcile those two truths has
led to this agonising place.
“To the men
I made uncomfortable through my messages that I viewed as consensual mutual
conversations at the time: I am truly sorry. They were inappropriate and it was
because of my failings that this discomfort was brought on you.”
He also
said he would not return to the Project from medical leave.
What the
Lincoln Project knew of Weaver’s behaviour, and when it knew it, remains in
dispute. The AP reported that founding member Ron Steslow was informed of
allegations against Weaver last June, told the group’s legal counsel and
advocated Weaver be removed. The Washington Blade, an LGBTQ+ news outlet, has
reported other communications from last summer. Weaver went on leave in August.
Weaver’s
harassment of young men was first reported in January by the American
Conservative; Scott Stedman, an independent reporter, and data analyst Garrett
Herrin, who said they were harassed by Weaver; and Axios. At the end of the
month, the New York Times published a detailed report.
The Lincoln
Project denied having known of the allegations for months. This week, Schmidt
told the AP no “employee, intern, or contractors ever made an allegation of
inappropriate communication about John Weaver that would have triggered an
investigation by HR or by an outside employment counsel.
“In other
words, no human being ever made an allegation about any inappropriate
sexualized communications about John Weaver ever.”
Speaking to
New York magazine, Schmidt said he had called Weaver and “said, ‘You need to
know that this is out there. Is there anything that we need to know?’ He said,
‘No, it’s bullshit. It’s not true.’”
Alex
Johnson, a former intern who alleges harassment by Weaver, said: “I really
wanted to believe everyone that they didn’t know the extent of it. They made it
seem like this was out of the blue and there wasn’t even a baseline knowledge
at all. This just seems like they were lying; it seems like they were not being
truthful to me.”
The AP
report and others also contained details of Lincoln Project fundraising and
fees paid to consulting firms owned by founding members. From the political
right, the National Review, a longtime antagonist, responded with a stark
headline: “Yes, the Lincoln Project Is an Ugly Grift.”
Schmidt
said: “We fully comply with the law. The Lincoln Project will be delighted to
open its books for audit immediately after the Trump campaign and all
affiliated Super Pacs do so.”
Contacted
by the Guardian on Friday, the 212th anniversary of the birth of Abraham
Lincoln, Wilson said no further comment would be issued while the review
continued.
Horn
tweeted a picture of the 16th president, with a famous quote from his speech in
1860 at Cooper Union in New York – the venue where the Lincoln Project held its
formal launch in February 2020.
“[Let us]
have faith that right makes might; and in that faith let us, to the end, dare
to do our duty as we understand it.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário