Souder resigns over secret affair

WASHINGTON – Republican US Representative Mark Souder, a self-proclaimed evangelical Christian, has said he had an affair with…

WASHINGTON – Republican US Representative Mark Souder, a self-proclaimed evangelical Christian, has said he had an affair with a female staffer and would resign, effective from tomorrow.

“I’m resigning rather than put my family through a painful drawn-out process,” Mr Souder said at a hastily called news conference in his home district in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr Souder likely faced an investigation by the House of Representatives ethics committee if he did not step aside.

In a statement issued by his office, Mr Souder (59) said he had “sinned against God, my wife and my family by having a mutual relationship with a part-time member of my staff”. David Wasserman, who tracks congressional races for the Cook Political Report, said the Republicans were likely to retain the seat because it serves “one of the most Republican districts in the state of Indiana”. The Republican Party will first have to move quickly to come up with a candidate to replace Mr Souder.

He is the 20th House Republican to announce plans to resign or run for higher office in November. There are 19 House Democrats who plan to retire or run for higher officer, or who have lost their party’s primary.

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Democrats now control the US House, 254-177, but with polls showing plenty of voter anger at Washington, lawmakers are scrambling to retain the advantage.

Mr Souder’s profile in The Almanac of American Politics quotes him as saying he is “most defined by the fact that I’m an evangelical Christian”. He has also been an advocate of abstinence in sexual education.

On the eve of his announcement on Tuesday, he spoke by phone with House Republican leader John Boehner. Michael Steel, a Boehner spokesman, said he was not aware of the details of their conversation, but “Boehner has been perfectly clear that he will hold our members to the highest ethical standards”. Mr Souder’s resignation comes a few months after a first-term House Democrat, Eric Massa, resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct.

In 2008, Mr Souder won re-election with 55 per cent of the vote in his northeast Indiana district, home to many manufacturers.

An aide to former senator Dan Coats, he gained a reputation early in his House career for challenging Republican leaders, arguing that Bills they pushed were not conservative enough. – (Reuters)