By Meghan Keane on 3.27.08 @ 12:07AM
What the Profumo and Spitzer scandals tell us about shame.
As Eliot Spitzer's once promising political career fades into
distant memory, the career of more than one misadventurer has
gotten a leg up in the past few weeks.
This weekend, Brazilian madam Andreia Schwartz was offered a
plea deal to spill details of her dalliances with the former
governor. She chose to keep quiet and head out to Brazil -- but
plans to tell all for the right price and is considering offers to
appear in the Brazilian Playboy.
The opportunities available in the aftermath of Spitzer's
political demise are notable for their similarity to another
political scandal that took place 45 years ago in the UK. On March
21, 1963, Secretary of State for War John Profumo announced in
Parliament that he had not been involved with a young woman who was
well-known for her sexual liaisons.
Then, it was Christine Keeler, a 19-year-old call girl who was
simultaneously sleeping with Yevgeny Ivanov, a Russian spy. When it
came out that Profumo had in fact been involved with Keeler, he
resigned and dedicated the remainder of his life to a charity in
the East End of London.
Though it is unlikely that Spitzer will spend the rest of his
life voluntarily atoning for his transgressions with the Emperor's
Club, it is interesting to note the events that transpired in the
wake of their scandals.
Profumo's sense of personal shame sent him to atone for over 40
years, and Stephen Ward -- accused of being Keeler's pimp and a spy
-- committed suicide in reaction to the stress of the scandal and
the charges against him. The scandal probably hastened the downfall
of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's Conservative government.
But Keeler, an attractive young woman, went on to pose for an
iconic Lewis Morley photograph and write two autobiographies. Two
films have since been made about the affair.
THE EVENTS FOLLOWING Profumo's scandal have become almost a
prototype of scandal aftermath today. As Spitzer's spiral down is
memorialized, the outliers in the situation are profiting
handsomely.
Spitzer's prostitute "Kristen," known as Ashley Alexandra Dupre,
sold over 2 million copies of her mediocre single "What We Want" on
MySpace after the scandal. She was also offered $1 million to tour
with Girls Gone Wild (until they realized they already had archived
footage of her topless and rescinded the offer -- oops). And now
Schwartz, who is only tangentially related to the scandal, may be
getting a book deal and a centerfold spread.
But more astonishing than the astronomical sums offered to young
women willing to spill scintillating details of their relationships
with the rich and famous is how the rules of politics have
changed.
Profumo was criticized for lying in Parliament and compromising
national security. He was shamed out of office for his sexual
transgression and continued to punish himself for the rest of his
days.
Today, New York's former governor, having made a name for
himself shaming corporations and chasing down prostitution rings,
has been dethroned. But in his place has sprung up a market for
terrible music on MySpace and a free pass for his replacement.
The lieutenant governor of New York, Blind African American
Democrat David Paterson, well-liked by party members and considered
to be a "breath of fresh air" in the governor's office, was
welcomed with open arms into the governor's office last week. And
yet, his first order of business was to admit that both he and his
wife had engaged in extramarital affairs. Next, we learned that he
used cocaine and marijuana.
Paterson's confessions have barely affected his new role as
governor. Though both men broke the law, Spitzer made the mistake
of condemning his own actions before they were made public.
Voters may not feel comfortable imposing their morals on
politicians, but they are more than comfortable punishing public
figures for violating their own moral codes.
SPITZER SPENT HIS career shaming businesses into acting the way he
wanted them to and punishing an activity publicly that he enjoyed
privately. When he announced that he had been involved with the
Emperor's Club, he quickly learned that while shame is a powerful
tool for an upwardly mobile politician, it can be equally powerful
on the way down.
The former New York governor has revived an act most thought
gone and buried -- the Democratic sex scandal. His attempts to curb
prostitution as governor only helped perpetuate it. Privately, he
contributed his own money to the Emperor's Club's earnings, and now
the notoriety he has given them will likely further their finances.
Untold advocates for legalizing prostitution have surfaced.
Paterson, on the other hand, took a lesson from his colleagues
-- most notably Bill Clinton -- and learned that it's easier to
survive a scandal when you've previously lowered public expectation
yourself.
With his pompous pledge to "change the ethics of Albany,"
Spitzer set the standards for his own conduct precariously high.
The lesson for politicians today is clear -- don't knock it if
you've tried it.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Business, Law, Russia, Africa