Ellen Romesch

Ellen Romesch

Ellen Romesch was allegedly an East German Communist spy who was assigned on diplomatic cover to the East German Embassy in Washington, DC during the early 1960's. She is also widely thought in some Washington journalism circles to have been one of President John F. Kennedy's girlfriends during the height of the Cold War.

According to a White House reporter of the time; now editor of the Washington Times, Wesley Pruden, "Just when a few brave Republicans were screwing up the courage to make something out of it, on the grounds that a president really shouldn't be taking off his clothes with a femme fatale from the Evil Empire, Bobby Kennedy, JFK's attorney general, sent J. Edgar Hoover to Capitol Hill with a not-so-friendly word to the wise. 'Don't investigate this,' he told the Republicans. 'Because if you do, we're going to open up everybody's closets.' J. Edgar Hoover, as every Republican knew, held the key to a lot of closets and was familiar with what was in all of them."

During the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal in a February 17, 1998 Washington Times OpEd article, editor Wesley Pruden interpreted that tactic as what former Bill Clinton White House Aide George Stephanopoulos meant when he said "The White House is being a bit disingenuous. When a real damaging charge comes out, someone speaking on background tries to answer it, which is another form of leak. There's a different long-term strategy, which I think could be far more explosive. White House allies are already starting to whisper about what I'll call the Ellen Romesch strategy" on ABC's "This Week" with Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts February 15, 1998. Not long after that statement Hustler Magazine Publisher Larry Flynt offered one million dollars for each unflattering sexual story about Republican members of congress. Prospective Speaker of the House Bob Livingston(R-LA) resigned after one such story was made public about him by Flynt.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”