-That there are a few hundred miles of smoke around him, and way too many people insisting that there can't possibly be a fire.
-That the sexual behavior to which he has already admitted, that of sleeping with college students, should have been enough for him to drop out of the race for Congress. The objections to that behavior never should have been characterized as homophobic, regardless of how that behavior was made known. Mayor Morse is not a victim, even if there were people who tried to entrap him into demonstrating behavior for which he was locally known.
-That the gay community seems to be fraught with fear that it can't talk in public about problems within its community. There also seems to be a faction of the community that would rather have inappropriate behavior normalized in public discussion than to confront major issues and take responsibility for them. It's not surprising that there are advocates from that community in leadership roles who want to normalize abuses of power. People who seek power are frequently the same in every community. That being said, has anyone noticed how many gay people and organizations have NOT made public statements of support for Mayor Morse, have NOT condemned and characterized as homophobic those who have questioned and objected to his behavior?
-That a monumental effort has been made to minimize his inappropriate behavior and to attack those who have questioned it. If he is elected, it's going to be even less likely that specific people who feel they were mistreated will talk about it.