WASHINGTON (AFP) — South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford on Wednesday admitted conducting a months-long affair with a woman in Argentina, but refused to answer questions about whether he would resign from office.
The conservative Republican governor from the southeastern US state made the admission at a press conference he had called to explain his mysterious disappearance over several days last week.
After detailing his previous adventure trips, "profound frustrations" and "emotional" exhaustion following the recent legislative session, he eventually acknowledged having an extramarital affair.
"So, the bottom line is this: I have been unfaithful to my wife," Sanford, 49, told a crush of reporters.
Sanford's admission comes in the wake of a similar revelation from another rising Republican star, Nevada Senator John Ensign, who last Tuesday admitted cheating on his wife but did not resign his Senate seat.
Sanford, once considered a potential Republican contender for the presidential nomination in 2012, said he would resign from his position as head of the Republican Governor's Association, but refused to say whether he would give up his post as governor.
First elected in 2002, Sanford has one year left in his second term as governor, and is constitutionally prohibited from running for another term.
The press conference Wednesday was called after days of media speculation as to where Sanford spent a period of five to seven days during which his staff, and even his wife, were unable to confirm his whereabouts.
Sanford's staff at first said the governor was hiking the Appalachian Trail, but then retracted that statement, provoking a media frenzy that culminated in Wednesday's bizarre press conference.
The governor spent much of his opening remarks offering apologies -- to his wife and four children, his friends, supporters and voters from South Carolina -- before announcing his adultery.
Sanford said he had spent a week with a woman in Argentina with whom he had conducted a months-long affair that developed out of an initially "very innocent" eight-year friendship conducted mostly via email.
"It developed into something much more than that," Sanford admitted.
The governor, whose voice occasionally wavered as he brushed away tears, lamented the consequences of his affair.
"I hurt a lot of different folks. All I can say is that I apologize," he said.
Sanford left unexplained how he first made contact with his distant mistress, but said their relationship began via "casual" emails.
He said there was a "certain irony" in that fact that he had early in their relationship tried to convince the woman to return to her estranged husband.
The affair is likely to deal a death-blow to Sanford's political future as a Republican candidate who had appealed to constituents with strong family values and religious beliefs.
Sanford acknowledged his political base during the press conference, offering a particular apology for his actions to "people of faith across South Carolina or, for that matter, across the nation."
The governor's wife, Jenny Sanford, was not at the press conference, and Sanford said his Argentine trip came five months after he first admitted his indiscretions and began attempting to reconcile with his wife.
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