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Barney Frank

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Plot Summary

Barney Frank

Stuart Weisberg

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 2009

Plot Summary
Barney Frank: The Story of America’s Only Left-handed, Gay, Jewish Congressman (2009), a political biography by author and political adviser Stuart E. Weisberg, narrates the life story of Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Congressman first elected in 1981, who rose to become Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

After an opening chapter setting the scene in Frank’s Congressional office at the height of his career in 2008, Weisberg returns to Frank’s childhood in Bayonne, New Jersey. Even as a child, Frank displayed great intellectual aptitude and independence of mind. He was argumentative, refusing to accept that adults knew best. Weisberg notes that only his mother, Elsie, and his sister, Ann (who would also go on to have a career in politics as a Democratic strategist) could best him in arguments. He loved baseball and tennis and spent a lot of time in the field and on the court.

Frank’s childhood was blue-collar, comfortable but not especially wealthy. As a teenager, he worked as a forecourt attendant at the truck stop owned by his father. Retaining his independent streak through adolescence, he changed his given name from “Barnett” to Barney. Frank tells Weisberg that growing up in Bayonne wasn’t always easy, especially from the age of 13, when Frank realized that he was gay. He only had relationships with women throughout his school years, afraid to come out for fear of the reaction in his community.



Frank’s intellectual aptitude took him to Harvard, where he continued to date only women. His studies were interrupted twice, first by his father’s death while he was an undergraduate and then again during his PhD by the launching of his political career. He left his PhD unfinished to take up a position as the Chief Assistant to the Mayor of Boston.

In Boston, Frank cut his political teeth. Weisberg paints a picture of a rough-and-ready, sometimes corrupt system, where politicians played hard and dirty. Frank thrived, and after a spell as a Congressman’s assistant, he stood for election as a Massachusetts state representative and won. While serving in this role, he returned to education, graduating from Harvard Law School.

Frank first decided to run for the House in 1980. An early opponent was future Senator John Kerry. The rivals met early in the process and Kerry decided not to continue with his bid. Frank won his primary and went to Washington, DC as the representative for the Massachusetts Fourth Congressional District, an area with a population of more than half a million people.



Immediately, Frank established himself as someone who was prepared to speak his mind, alienating Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy by declaring that Kennedy had no chance of being president. Weisberg gives detailed accounts of some of Frank’s other clashes, notably with Michael Dukakis and future Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. We also learn about his friendships and alliances with fellow representatives, including Sonny Bono and Dan Lungren.

Although Frank was privately living as a gay man, he still had not publicly come out. Weisberg gives a full account of the sex scandal which lead to Frank’s publicly revealing his sexuality and threatened his political career. In 1985, Frank hired Steve Gobie, a male prostitute. They became friends, and Frank hired him—with his personal funds—as an aide and live-in housekeeper. Two years later, Frank evicted Gobie when he learned from his landlord that Gobie was still working as a prostitute, from Frank’s home.

Gobie went public with his story, hoping to profit by selling it. Many media outlets called for Frank’s resignation. In response, Frank invited the House Ethics Committee to investigate him. Although several Republicans called for severe measures to be taken, Frank was cleared of the most serious charges and was merely reprimanded by the House.



The year after he was cleared, Frank faced a strong Republican challenge for his seat. It was during this campaign that Frank produced some of the most memorable of the witty barbs for which he is known. His Republican challenger—notoriously not very smart—called for Frank to take an AIDS test and reveal the result. Frank replied that he would if his opponent would take an IQ test and reveal his result.

During the Clinton Administration, Frank was a vehement critic of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” even though it meant drawing the fire of his Democratic colleagues. Later, however, he was equally vehement in his defense of Clinton when the President was impeached. Frank tells Weisberg that he sympathized with the President, having been through his own public scandal.

In 2007, Frank was chosen as chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. He became, according to several of Weisberg’s interviewees, one of the most powerful figures in Congress.



The book ends in Frank’s 69th year. He tells Weisberg that he is still going strong and hopes to be the first openly gay person appointed to the Cabinet, preferably as Housing and Urban Development Secretary.

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