The gray church building stands on the outskirts of Clio, a town of about 2,600 people, along a road of sporting goods stores and nondescript restaurant chains. If that’s all you have to stand on, you’re not fit to be president of the United States.” “A mayor from a small city and his husband, a child who grew up with nothing and his parents kicked him out … it makes a perfect political story for the campaign,” he said in an interview with the Washington Examiner at his church in Clio. The reports were based on a Washington Post article, which described how Chasten, 29, was forced out of the family home and never reconciled with his two brothers.īut rather than rejecting his brother Chasten, a would-be 'first gentleman,' Glezman, who has run the Clio Community Church for the past two years, said his family has been loving and supportive throughout.