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Ensign's spokeswoman did not immediately return a request for comment. Albregts said the Hamptons recently relocated to California to start a new life together, but Ensign's continued presence in Washington
-- a constant reminder of the affair -- has prolonged their healing process. "They lost everything," Albregts said. "They are trying to rebuild their lives." Ensign acknowledged the relationship with Cindy Hampton in June 2009. The Ensigns and the Hamptons had been close friends and Cindy Hampton also worked for Ensign in Washington. The affair and the legal problems that followed ended talk that Ensign might make a run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012 and forced him to resign his position as chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee. Through it all, Ensign insisted he would seek re-election until his announcement on Monday, when he reiterated that he had not violated any laws or ethics rules. He also said the investigation did not influence his decision to retire from politics after 2012. "If I was concerned about that I would have resigned, because that would make the most sense because then it goes away," Ensign said.
[Associated
Press;
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