FRANKFORT, Ky. — A Kentucky Democratic lawmaker accused of sexual harassment by several women should give ''serious thought'' to resigning, Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday as the first-term legislator has become increasingly alienated in his own political party.
State Rep. Daniel Grossberg was temporarily suspended from the House Democratic caucus and removed from his interim committee assignments after allegations arose this summer that the Louisville lawmaker had engaged in inappropriate conduct. Interim committee meetings allow lawmakers to review issues and hear from stakeholders ahead of the next legislative session that begins in January. Grossberg's Democratic House colleagues also requested that the Legislative Ethics Commission investigate the allegations against him.
Grossberg and his attorney have steadfastly denied he engaged in any impropriety or abuse of power. The lawmaker narrowly won his spring primary and is unopposed in the November election.
"He has a duty to his constituents and he intends to fulfill the role they elected him to serve,'' his attorney, Anna Whites, said Thursday in response to the governor's remarks.
The embattled lawmaker came under increased pressure on Thursday.
First, the Louisville Democratic Party's executive committee asked that Grossberg ''temporarily refrain'' from attending the group's events or meetings amid any investigation.
Later in the day, Beshear weighed in with his strongest comments yet.
''I hope Rep. Grossberg is giving serious thought and having discussions with family members about whether a public office is the best or most appropriate place for him to be at this time,'' the Democratic governor said when asked about the matter at his weekly news conference.