Scott DesJarlais says voters focused on solutions

Friday, January 1, 1904

photo U.S. Rep. Scott DesJarlais, R-Tenn., speaks to supporters on Tuesday in Winchester, Tenn. At left is his wife, Amy. DesJarlais defeated Democrat Eric Stewart in the state's 4th Congressional District.

VOTE TOTAL* Scott DesJarlais: 128,500* Eric Stewart: 101,944Source: Tennessee Secretary of State

NASHVILLE - Republican U.S. Rep. Scott DesJarlais says his victory in the 4th Congressional District race shows that voters care about getting things done in Washington, not salacious details of his divorce.

"For the second election in a row, my opponents and the liberal media have tried to ignore the problems facing our nation and instead concentrate solely on a 14-year-old divorce," DesJarlais said in a statement.

DesJarlais easily won re-election Tuesday, overcoming revelations that, as a physician, he had affairs with at least two patients a dozen years ago and pressed one of the women about getting an abortion.

The election results "clearly show that Tennesseans want leaders in Washington who are focused on providing solutions that will ensure a brighter future for our country," he said.

Unofficial results show the conservative Jasper congressman, who has run two campaigns as an anti-abortion advocate, won the 16-county 4th Congressional District contest with 55.94 percent of the vote versus 44.06 percent for Democrat Eric Stewart, a Winchester state senator.

Late Tuesday night, DesJarlais was well ahead of Stewart -- even beating Stewart in his home county of Franklin. But election night foul-ups in tallying totals by Rutherford County, the district's largest county, prevented DesJarlais from declaring victory until Wednesday.

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DesJarlais has acknowledged the accuracy of a transcript of a 2000 telephone conversation in which he pressed a former patient with whom he had had an affair to get an abortion. But the congressman said he knew the woman wasn't pregnant and he was using "strong language" in an effort to get her to admit it.

A second patient last month told the Times Free Press that she had dated DesJarlais and the physician had prescribed her drugs and used marijuana with her.

Both episodes came in the midst of DesJarlais' bitter divorce with then-wife Susan. During his first campaign in 2010, DesJarlais was attacked by Democrats over allegations his then wife made about erratic behavior, including putting a gun in his own mouth for several hours.