Can Cory Booker Keep It Together?

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John Gara

CORY BOOKER IS in a meeting when the column goes online. A big-name, top-notch brand wants to build a "massive site" in Newark, New Jersey, and Booker is busy courting a potential billion dollars in development for his city. By the time the article goes live - The Stanford Daily with the scoop! - the mayor's staff is already aware. Booker had them up all night and day on the phone about it. "That took 48 hours of our time," says Modia Butler, Booker's chief of staff. Booker wrote the 700-word article in 1992, during his final year at Stanford. He was keeping up a weekly column for the Daily - published maybe 15 pieces in total - and says he wrote about "every hot-button issue there was, from rape to race." This one happened to focus on Booker's struggle with homophobia. BuzzFeed's Andrew Kaczynski had actually found it first, but was waiting on comment from Booker's office before a cub reporter at the Stanford paper jumped the gun and published it himself. It was a good find: The mayor of Newark was a dramatic 22-year-old. "I was disgusted by gays," reads one of the opening lines. "Allow me to be more direct, escaping the euphemisms of my past - I hated gays." But in the rest of the column, Booker details in much eloquence the way in which his teenage self underwent a radical transformation on the issue. "It didn't take me long to realize that the root of my hatred did not lie with gays but with myself," it reads - and ends with a flourish: an oath to "continue to struggle for personal justice." With the column online, the mayor's staff is calm - like nothing ever happened. Booker is calm too. The response to the piece on Twitter is, somehow, overwhelmingly positive. "Cory Booker was even super awesome in 1992," one fan tweets. Booker responds, "I was writing about my teenage struggle for integrity. Thanks." But this doesn't surprise Booker. He may not trust reporters to tell a true story about him or his

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