The Phnom Penh Post

Hollywood’s #MeToo campgain engulfs Washington

- Ivan Couronne and Chris Lefkow

FROM the White House to Congress to the Supreme Court, Washington has had its share of sexual scandals.

But the #MeToo wave exposing sexual misconduct which began in Hollywood slammed into the US capital this week, triggering a dizzying slew of allegation­s, apologies and resignatio­ns.

Democratic Senator Al Franken said he was sorry after a radio talk show host accused him of forcibly kissing her in 2006 – two years before voters in Minnesota sent him to the Senate – and for posing for a picture which showed him groping her breasts as she slept.

President Donald Trump, despite numerous allegation­s that he has personally engaged i n lewd conduct towards women, was quick to pile on, calling him “Al Frankensti­en” and saying the picture was “really bad”.

When asked by reporters on Friday the difference between the allegation­s against Trump and those against Franken, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders replied: “Senator Franken has admitted wrongdoing and the president hasn’t.”

“I think that’s a very clear distinctio­n,” she added.

Trump’s Twitter attack on the Democratic senator was in stark contrast to his relative silence over another scandal – allegation­s that the Republican candidate for the US Senate in Alabama, Roy Moore, once preyed on teenage girls.

Meanwhile, two female members of the House of Representa­tives – one Democrat and one Republican – have accused two lawmakers, who they declined to name, of sexual harassment.

And a congresswo­man’s chief of staff resigned amid allegation­s that he had sexually harassed co-workers.

Former president George HW Bush, 93, has also found himself in the line of fire, accused by half a dozen women of groping them during photo ops, both before and after he became confined to a wheelchair.

One of the most recent and high-profile cases of sexual misconduct in Congress involved the former Republican speaker of the House, Dennis Hastert, who pleaded guilty in 2015 to making illegal payments to hush up his molestatio­n of teenage boys.

Su p re me Cour t Ju d g e Clarence Thomas’s Senate confirmati­on hearing in 1991 was overshadow­ed by allegation­s he sexually harassed a staffer, Anita Hill, charges which he denied.

And then of course there is former Democratic president Bill Clinton, who admitted to having sexual relations with an intern, Monica Lewinsky, while serving in the White House.

The Trump presidenti­al campaign repeatedly brought up Clinton’s indiscreti­ons during the bitter 2016 White House race against his wife, Hillary.

At the same time, the Trump campaign rejected the claims of multiple women that the billionair­e real estate tycoon had acted inappropri­ately towards them – a pattern of behaviour Trump more or less admitted in a notorious 2005 recording.

“I’m automatica­lly attracted to beautiful – I just start kissing them,” he said in the audiotape, which surfaced during the campaign. “It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything.

“Grab ’em by the p—. You can do anything,” Trump said.

On Capitol Hill, Congress is attempting to be proactive in containing the fallout from the new allegation­s against lawmakers.

Republican speaker Paul Ryan announced this week that the House would adopt “mandatory anti-harassment and anti-discrimina­tion training” for lawmakers and their staff.

“Our goal is not only to raise awareness, but also make abundantly clear that harassment in any form has no place in this institutio­n,” Ryan said.

The Senate made anti-harassment training mandatory last week.

 ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Senator Al Franken looks over his papers during a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on Capitol Hill November 14 in Washington, DC.
MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Senator Al Franken looks over his papers during a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on Capitol Hill November 14 in Washington, DC.

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