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Gary Condit (born April 21, 1948Gary Condit is an American politician, a fiscally and socially conservative "Blue Dog" Democrat who served in the House of Representatives from 1989 to 2003. Condit represented the 18th congressional district of California, the northern San Joaquin Valley. (When he was first elected, this district was the 15th District; it became the 18th district after redistricting following the 1990 census.) He has been married to Carolyn Condit since 1967.

Early Life and Career

Condit was born in Oklahoma to a Free Will Baptist minister father. As an adult, Condit came with his wife and son to the San Joaquin Valley in the late 1960s. He graduated California State University, Stanislaus in Turlock, California. After a brief task in a public relations business, Condit was elected to the Ceres, City Council.

In 1974, Condit was elected mayor of Ceres, and from 1976 to 1982 was a member of the Stanislaus County Board of Supervisors.

In 1982, he was elected to the California State Assembly. While a member of the assembly, Condit was a member of the "Gang of Five." At the time, the Democrats (led by Assembly Speaker Willie Brown) held a 44-36 majority in the Assembly. It was rumored that the Gang of Five sought to ally with the Republicans, thereby setting up a 41-39 majority, and elect one of themselves as speaker, but this rumored effort failed.

Condit was elected to Congress in a 1989 special election, after House Democratic Whip Tony Coelho resigned in disgrace.

Chandra Levy Incident

In 2001, Condit became the subject of national news coverage, after the disappearance of Chandra Levy, a Washington, D.C. intern originally from Condit's district. Condit, a married man, was alleged to had been involved in an affair with Levy.

While Condit was never an official suspect in the disappearance, Levy's family — and subsequently the national media — suspected that Condit was withholding important information about the intern's disappearance. Suspicion was deepened when Condit tried to avoid answering direct questions during a televised interview with news anchor Connie Chung on Aug. 23, 2001.

He faded from the news following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, only to reappear during his announcement to run for an 8th term on December 7.

Shortly thereafter, on December 12, 2001, Condit was the subject of a highly satirical (almost borderline-character assassination) episode of the television series South Park, called Butters' Very Own Episode. In the show, he is severely ridiculed for his lack of forthrightness concerning Levy's disappearance and is categorized together with suspected murderers O.J. Simpson and John and Patsy Ramsey. (Here is a link to a denegrating quote about Condit from the South Park episode)

Condit lost the primary elections in March 2002 to his former aide, then-Assemblyman Dennis Cardoza, and left Congress at the end of his term in 2003.

After an extensive search, Levy's remains were discovered by a jogger in Rock Creek Park in Washington, D.C., and in May 2002, a medical examiner determined Levy's cause of death was homicide.

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