Senator Al Franken says he is returning to work despite feeling ashamed

JTA

Al Franken

Al Franken speaking outside the Capitol, June 9, 2016. (Gabriella Demczuk/Getty Images)

(JTA) — Democratic Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota told local media he would return to work, despite being ashamed of sexual harassment allegations against him.

Franken said he would not resign from the Senate, and that he would return to work in Washington on Monday after the week-long Thanksgiving recess. He pledged to fight the proposed GOP tax bill.

“I’m going to do my job and I’m going to go forward. I’m going to take responsibility. I’m going to be held accountable and I’m going to try to be productive in the way I speak about this,” Franken told Minnesota Public Radio.

“The Ethics Committee is looking into all of this and I will cooperate fully with it. I know I have a lot of work to do to regain the trust of people I’ve let down,” he also said.

Franken has apologized to the women who have accused him. He told local media including Minnesota Public Radio that he wants to be a “better man.”

Last week, Lindsay Menz, 33, said that Franken, a Minnesota Democrat, grabbed her buttocks while they took a photo together at the Minnesota State Fair in 2010. In a statement to CNN, Franken said he did not remember taking the photo with Menz and that he felt “badly that Ms. Menz came away from our interaction feeling disrespected.”

Menz’s accusation came after the accusation by Leeann Tweeden, a Los Angeles-based news anchor and former model, went public that Franken groped her during a 2006 tour to entertain U.S. troops in the Middle East and forcibly kissed her. Franken was a comedian and a writer at the time; he has served as a senator since 2009. Franken apologized to Tweeden.

On Thursday, two other women accused Franken of touching their buttocks while taking photos during campaign events in Minneapolis in 2007 and 2008, the lawmaker’s first campaign for the Senate. Franken told the Minneapolis Star Tribune that he has posed for tens of thousands of photos over the years and does not remember intentionally touching women inappropriately during them.

He told the newspaper that has spent the past week “thinking about how that could happen and I just recognize that I need to be more careful and a lot more sensitive in these situations.”

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