Andrew Gillum announces he’s going into rehab after Miami hotel incident

Andrew Gillum announces he’s going into rehab after Miami hotel incident

Andrew Gillum (Photo: YouTube)

The former mayor of Tallahassee, Florida, and Democratic Gubernatorial candidate, Andrew Gillum, has announced he is withdrawing from public life and going into rehab.

The news comes after the LGBTQ ally was found by police in a Miami hotel room last week with a man who appeared to have OD’ed.

Related: Andrew Gillum is embroiled in scandal due to drug overdose of alleged gay escort

Police found Gillum, 40, too inebriated to speak in a room at the Mondrian South Beach in the early hours of Friday morning. They also found three bags suspected to contain crystal meth in the room.

The man he was with was successfully resuscitated. A third man had called the police, after entering the room and witnessing the second man pass out.

Gillum issued a statement Friday admitting he had been drunk but denying he’d taken any drugs. “I was in Miami last night for a wedding celebration when first responders were called to assist one of my friends. While I had too much to drink, I want to be clear that I have never used methamphetamines.”

Gillum was not arrested and the incident is not being treated as a criminal matter.

Multiple outlets have since revealed that the 30-year-old man Gillum was found with had a profile on a male escort website. It has now been deleted. The 30-year-old told the Miami New Times on Friday afternoon he had known Gillum as a friend for the past year. He has since not responded to media requests for comment, instead saying he is consulting with an attorney.

Last night, Gillum issued a further statement.

“After conversation with my family and deep reflection, I have made the decision to seek help, guidance, and enter a rehabilitation facility at this time.

“This has been a wake-up call for me. Since my race for governor ended, I fell into a depression that has led to alcohol abuse. I witnessed my father suffer from alcoholism and I know the damaging effects it can have when untreated.

“I also know that alcoholism is often a symptom of deeper struggles. I am committed to doing the personal work to heal fully and show up in the world as a more complete person.

“I now need to firmly focus on myself and my family. I will be stepping down from all public facing roles for the foreseeable future.”

Related: Don’t let Trump fool you. The new face of American politics is young, queer & racially diverse

Gillum served as Mayor of Tallahassee from 2014-2018. He stood to be Governor of Florida in 2018 but lost to Republican opponent Ron DeSantis.

The progressive Democrat was a regular political pundit on CNN and also founded political committee Forward Florida, an organization to motivate voters in Florida to vote out President Trump. He is stepping down from both roles.

Gillum is married with three children. Some political opponents have voiced delight at his downfall, prompting a comment from his wife, R. Jai Gillum, on Facebook.

“I am overwhelmed by the love and support of all those who love me and my family,” she said. “To those who are praying for us and wishing us well, thank you. To those who delight in the misfortune of others, my sincere prayer is that you’re never in a situation to experience the same treatment. I have learned that every time I judge someone else, I reveal an unhealed part of myself.

“In times of great uncertainty, one thing is clear: This too, shall pass.”

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John Oliver’s Unplugged, Honest, and Emotional Coronavirus Episode is a Must: WATCH

John Oliver’s Unplugged, Honest, and Emotional Coronavirus Episode is a Must: WATCH

John Oliver coronavirus episode

John Oliver delivered a truncated, stripped-down, and emotional episode of Last Week Tonight from a satellite studio because the CBS studios where it is usually shot (in front of a live audience, no more) had confirmed cases of coronavirus this week.

Oliver began the episode: “We are clearly in the midst of a rapidly escalating outbreak, and it’s very difficult to say exactly where things stand, especially because, despite Trump repeatedly claiming otherwise, tests for this virus are still not available in most places to those who need them, which means that we can’t properly track the virus, or know how quickly it’s spreading.”

Oliver also looked at Dr. Anthony Fauci’s balancing act of having to deliver actual facts to the American people and dealing with a president who does not like to deal in facts.

Said Oliver: “Nothing is fine here. The president’s response has sadly been characterized by disorganization and lies.”

Oliver explained the Trump administration’s delay in administering testing, because Trump thought that “more testing might have led to more cases being discovered of coronavirus outbreak, and the president had made clear: the lower the numbers on coronavirus, the better for the president, the better for his potential re-election this fall.”

Added Oliver: “That is not only catastrophic, it’s also deeply frustrating, especially when you see how quickly other countries, including South Korea, ramped up their testing capabilities.”

When confronted by a White House reporter that he had disbanded the National Security Council’s pandemic unit, Trump called it a “nasty question” and blamed others.

Said Oliver: “Perfect. That is a level of dodging responsibility that Trump has been perfecting ever since he was very much not in Vietnam.”

Oliver also looked at Trump’s lie that Google was building a website to direct people to testing facilities. But Google quickly clarified that it wasn’t true.

“This is frustrating and extremely unnerving and it is actively contributing to a sense of confusion in the country at the moment. At this point it may be best to put the president aside — don’t worry, there is going to be ample time to be utterly furious with him later — but the fact is, even though this should not be the case, it seems we’re going to be a little bit on our own here and because of that, it might be worth going over some basic rules that health experts say we should all absolutely be following to help stem this outbreak.”

Oliver then showed a TikTok video that he said “offered more useful public health advice” in 12 seconds that the president did in his address to the nation.

@hamstarz

He is doing all he can to stop the spread of Corona…..are you?😉 (Tips from CDC) 👍🏻##hamster ##corona ##cdc

♬ Its Corona time – playboierik21

“There is a ton of misinformation out there, so please be careful before forwarding or retweeting stuff that you do not know to be true,” Oliver added, after offering some information about flattening the curve. “Our personal actions are really going to count here. Even if you’re not worried about getting this virus other people, especially the elderly and immunosuppressed simply don’t have that luxury so it’s a good idea to treat these precautions like you would the flu shot — you don’t get the flu shot just for you. You get it for everyone else. We all have a real responsibility to one other right now because the choices we make will contribute directly to how bad this crisis gets.”

Oliver left viewers with a message: “I know things are currently very scary things are going to be weird for while….the fact that that is true makes it even more important that going forward we’re going to need to look out for one another — and not just in terms of containing the transmission of this virus — but in terms the economic impact this is going to have on those who will not be able to weather it.”

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John Oliver’s Unplugged, Honest, and Emotional Coronavirus Episode is a Must: WATCH