
Harvard University Professor Larry Summers has been exposed for sending embarrassing emails to Jeffrey Epstein asking him for romantic advice.
The House Oversight Committee released a vast tranche of Epstein emails last week, including several sent by one of Harvard’s most distinguished professors to his self-described ‘wingman’.
In email exchanges dated between 2013 and 2019, Summers and Epstein frequently shared their thoughts about current events and politics – while also delving into the married economics professor’s love life.
Veteran economist Summers, 70, complained to the now-disgraced financier about feeling like ‘the friend without benefits’ in his relationship with one woman who jilted him in 2019, and asked him for tips on how to reply to her texts.
This was long after Epstein’s guilty plea to sex crimes against children in 2008 – and Harvard had already stopped accepting donations from him the previous year in light of the allegations.
The emails have prompted Senator Elizabeth Warren to urge Harvard to cut ties with Summers, who is the Ivy League schools’ former president, and who also served as Bill Clinton’s Treasury Secretary and Barack Obama’s Director of the NEC.
Warren told CNN she believes Summers ‘cannot be trusted’ with young college students given his lengthy friendship with Epstein.
The House Oversight Committee released a vast tranche of Epstein emails last week, including several sent by one of Harvard’s most distinguished professors Larry Summers (pictured)
In email exchanges dated between 2013 and 2019, Summers and Epstein frequently shared their thoughts about current events and politics – while also delving into the married economics professor’s love life. (Pictured: Epstein smiling at Summers, pictured front right)
Summers is married to Elisa New, who is a professor emerita of American Literature at Harvard. It’s unclear whether they have an open relationship or if he was cheating on his partner of now-20 years.
In one March 2019 email, Summers complained to Epstein that he was concerned that the attention he was giving one woman may not pay off in the form of sexual reward.
‘I dint (sic) want to be in a gift giving competition while being the friend without benefits,’ he wrote.
Summers analyzed his exchange with the woman in classic economic terms, by weighing up how he could maximize profit from what he gave.
Epstein praised the hopeless professor for his efforts, writing that his lack of ‘whining’ to the woman ‘showed strength’.
The economics professor then whined that the woman had abandoned plans with him for another man she was ‘really attracted’ to but was ‘unsuitable as a partner’.
He told Epstein he could not criticize her for this due to their power dynamic, and because he had canceled on her thanks to ‘family and work constraints’ in the past.
‘Should I just wait for her to call?’ he asked the sex offender, while suggesting that he could alternatively tell the woman she had ‘used up 80 percent of what she was owed’ by making him change his plans.
Epstein also referred to himself in some emails as Summers’ ‘wingman’, according to the Harvard Crimson.
Summers analyzed his exchange with the woman in classic economic terms, by weighing up how he could maximize profit from what he gave in the exchange with Epstein
In November 2018, Summers also forwarded a redacted email from a woman to Epstein, in order to ask his advice on what he should write back.
‘Think no response for a while probably appropriate,’ Summers wrote, according to CNN.
‘she’s already beginning to sound needy 🙂 nice,’ Epstein replied in part.
The previous year, in October 2017, Summers raged to Epstein that men could be banned from a social media site or a think tank because ‘they hit on a few women 10 years ago’.
Summers told The Harvard Crimson on Wednesday that he regretted his friendship with Epstein.
‘I have great regrets in my life. As I have said before, my association with Jeffrey Epstein was a major error of judgment,’ he said.
The Daily Mail has reached out to Summers for comment.



