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Delaware Sen. Tom Carper admitted in 1998 to slapping his wife and giving her a black eye after previously denying the incident during his first run for Congress in 1982.
Carper called the accusation “without basis in fact” during his first run for Congress and promised to sue the New York Post, that first published the accusation in 1982. He admitted to the incident 16 years later, but little has been reported about the incident since.
“Did I slap my wife 20 years ago? Yes … Do I regret it? Yes. Would I do it again? No,” said Carper during the interview, that was included Cohen’s 2002 book, “Only in Delaware.” The Delaware Democrat was crafting a different message during his 1982 congressional campaign.
Carper, a Democrat who has criticized colleagues in the past over sexual assault allegations, attacked his Republican opponent that year for his “vicious” efforts to smear his family.
“Let me say clearly and categorically that the implications in that story are without basis in fact,” Carper told a reporter shortly after the accusations emerged. He called the story “outrageous” and an attempt at “political character assassination.”
The New York Post’s report was based on a taped deposition of Carper taken as part of a custody fight between his wife, Diane Carper, and her first husband. She eventually vouched for Carper’s story and blasted the New York Post’s reporting on the issue.
“Let me state, unequivocally, that I would never allow my children or myself to be abused,” she told a reporter in 1982. “The very notion that anyone would imply such a thing for political gain or any other reason is appalling.”
Carper’s deposition did include an admission that he gave his wife a black eye and spanked the children during the 1981 deposition, according to a report from New Journal.
“I slapped Diane one time,” Carper said in the deposition. “It was a stupid thing to do and I … regret it now. It caused some discoloration of her left eye and some puffiness.”
Carper called allegations that Minnesota Sen. Al Franken, a Democrat, sexually assaulted several women “deeply troubling and disappointing.”
“Al Franken has been a friend to many in the Senate – Republicans, Democrats, and Independents alike – but these allegations are deeply troubling, especially as the number has grown,” Carper tweeted earlier this month. “I believe it’s time for him to resign.”
The Franken revelation came amid accusations former Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore harassed multiple teenage girls during the late-1970s. It also comes on the heels of several media exposes on Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein suggesting the titan spent years assaulting young actresses.
Carper’s Senate office has not responded to The Daily Caller News Foundation’s repeated requests for comments about why the senator denied and the admitted to acts of domestic abuse.
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