

Spokane, Wash.,
mayor James West, facing a recall over alleged misuse of
public office for offering an internship to someone he met
in a gay chat room, says he regrets his online
activities but still maintains he's done nothing
wrong. West is battling colon cancer while fighting for his
political career, marking time while undergoing chemotherapy
by editing transcripts for a lawsuit he plans to
file—whether or not he survives a special
December 6 recall election over the City Hall sex scandal.
In a wide-ranging interview with the Associated
Press on Monday, West discussed his health, his
future, and the circumstances that led to his present
political crisis. "I wish I had never gone online at all. I
just wish I hadn't," West said. "I scratch my head today. I
can't tell you why." West, who just began another
three-month chemo session, said the results of his
cancer treatment have been promising. His once-full
head of hair is thin and graying.
A recent poll indicates that 62% of those
who responded would vote to recall West—with
29% saying they would vote to retain him—but the
former Republican state senate leader said he has overcome
negative poll results before and remains optimistic he
will remain in office.
West said he has no specific plans should the
recall succeed in ousting him from the office he has
held since January 2004. "Forty-seven percent of the
people voted against me in the first place. They wanted
Tom Grant...so there is a huge negative base right there,"
West said.
During a run for reelection to the state senate
in 1998, one early poll showed that just 22%
approved of his job performance, "and I won that
election handily," West said.
West declined to discuss his recall election
strategy but said he will continue to make appearances
at community events so people "can see me as a
person." Tears welled up in the mayor's eyes and he paused
to collect himself at one point while reading a
supportive letter he received from a former Boy Scout
now living in the Netherlands.
One sure campaign issue will be coverage of West
by The Spokesman-Review
, which has published a series of stories about
the mayor's online activities as well as rumors of
pedophilia and sexual abuse of boys when he was a sheriff's
deputy and Boy Scout leader. West has not been charged
with any crimes. The Department of Justice has
acknowledged that it is conducting a public
corruption investigation, and the Spokane city council has
hired an investigator to determine whether the mayor
violated city computer use policies.
During the 75-minute interview, West took
repeated jabs at the newspaper and editor Steven A.
Smith. West called the pedophilia accusations
"fabrications" and said he never considered resigning after
the newspaper began running the articles last May.
"The easy thing for me would have been to just crawl
off and move away," West said. "This is my town. I'll
be here long after Steve Smith's gone. Absolutely.
Guaranteed. And when it's all said and done, I'll have a
better reputation than Steve Smith." West said he intends to
sue the newspaper for invasion of privacy, regardless
of the recall election outcome.
Smith said the newspaper stands by its
reporting, adding that his reputation is based on the
job the newspaper does. "I'm not being recalled, and
my reputation won't be decided one way or another on
December 6," Smith said. "Mayor West is being recalled for
actions which he has in large part acknowledged and
allegations which to this point he has failed to
refute. I think the citizens understand the issues and
will respond accordingly."
Although West is accused of using his city-owned
computer to try to develop relationships in gay chat
rooms and has criticized the newspaper for what he
called "my brutal outing," the mayor deflected most
questions about his sexual orientation. "I'm not going to
psychoanalyze myself," West said, adding he is not in psychoanalysis.
And while he has acknowledged visiting gay Web
sites, the mayor said he has not accessed pornographic
sites. West said his lawyers fought to block public
release of the contents of his laptop hard drive because
they will show profiles of users of a gay chat room who
signed privacy pledges. West contended he no longer
visits chat rooms but defended the Web sites as
acceptable ways for people to meet others. "To condemn
it, to say it's wrong, means there's a whole bunch of folks
out there who are perfectly legitimate folks that use
that as a perfectly legitimate means to get to know
people," West said. "What are you going to do, go to a bar?"
West fended off suggestions that he was being a
hypocrite by voting against gay-friendly bills during
nearly two decades in the state legislature. "I never
stood up anyplace, in any campaign, and said, 'I'll go
and vote for gay rights' and then didn't. That would be
hypocritical," he said. "I was never a closeted conservative
or a closeted liberal. I was a conservative. I wasn't
pretending to be a conservative. I believe in certain
things, and that hasn't changed today."
Although he voted against five bills considered
to be gay-friendly during his tenure in Olympia, he
also helped secure money for a Seattle AIDS house and
voted to make money available for health benefits for people
with AIDS, West said. "If you have this real activist
agenda, I'd be against that," he said. "I
don't think this is hypocritical at all. There are
lots of issues. I wasn't the champion. I wasn't in
front of these issues. I wasn't tilting at windmills. I just
didn't vote for them." (AP)
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