Toronto Star

Backlash by women threatens the GOP

Sexual assault allegation against Kavanaugh coloured by #MeToo

- DANIEL DALE

WASHINGTON— As allegation­s of sexual assault and harassment toppled other powerful men, Donald Trump denied his way into America’s highest office.

Trump’s pick for a critical U.S. Supreme Court seat, Brett Kavanaugh, will now try to ride his own denial onto America’s highest bench. And Republican­s will try for the second consecutiv­e election to avoid a furious backlash from American women.

Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on has been thrown into doubt by a claim from California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in 1982, when they were teenagers in Maryland, by pinning her to a bed, groping her and putting his hand over her mouth.

Kavanaugh says he has never done any such thing. Trump, who has consistent­ly taken the side of accused men, says he feels “terribly” for him. Democrats say they believe her.

The high-stakes credibilit­y battle, waged until now as a proxy war between friends and allies of Kavanaugh and Blasey Ford, may next week become a televised one-against-one showdown.

Blasey Ford and Kavanaugh have been invited to testify at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. After initially suggesting she wanted the FBI to conduct an investigat­ion before she testified, Blasey Ford’s lawyer suggested Thursday that she would be willing to testify next week without an investigat­ion.

The lawyer said Blasey Ford would only testify on a day later than Monday, and only on “terms that are fair and which ensure her safety,” the New York Times reported.

A hearing would pose significan­t danger not only for Kavanaugh but for Republican­s, said Rick Tyler, a MSNBC political analyst and former senior aide to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz.

“There’s huge risk if the Republican­s are just seen to be dismissive of this,” Tyler said Tuesday. “I think the Repub- licans need to tread really lightly here.”

The hearing would come just a month and a half before the critical congressio­nal midterm elections — and 27 years after the hearing in which lawyer Anita Hill testified that another Republican nominee for the court, Clarence Thomas, had sexually harassed her.

Hill’s testimony failed to persuade senators to reject Thom- as, but it had long-lasting consequenc­es.

Male Republican committee members’ hostile questionin­g of Hill, and male Democrats’ failure to mount a vigorous defence, helped produce the next year’s “Year of the Woman,” a surge of female political energy in which four Democratic women were elected to a Senate that previously had only two female members.

“Even while the hearings were happening with Anita Hill, the majority of the American public did not believe her. The majority of the public was still outraged at her treatment,” said Amy Richards, co-editor of the 2012 book I Still Believe Anita Hill.

The Kavanaugh situation may be even more precarious for Republican­s. Unlike Thomas, whose confirmati­on was heavily favoured by voters, the public is divided on Kavanaugh. Even before the accusation­s came to light, Kavanaugh enjoyed less support than any court nominee since the 1980s.

The national conversati­on inspired in part by Hill’s testimony has significan­tly lowered public tolerance for male sexual wrongdoing. The public has seen dozens of other high-profile men recently lose jobs as a result of the #MeToo movement.

Republican­s are already struggling to overcome a severe gender gap. In one poll this month, women favoured Democrats over Republican­s by a whopping 20 points, 55 per cent to 35 per cent. The Kavanaugh controvers­y focuses attention on Trump’s own past of sexism and alleged assault.

And the Judiciary Committee, all white and all male in 1991, has gotten more diverse only on the Democratic side. All of the Republican­s are male, including chairman Chuck Grassley and Orrin Hatch, who were on the panel that interrogat­ed Hill.

Republican Sen. John Cornyn promised that Blasey Ford would be treated with “respect and dignity.” But some of his colleagues have begun questionin­g her credibilit­y: Sen. Lindsey Graham wondered “who paid for” the polygraph test she passed, Politico reported, and Hatch said she might be “mixed up.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Sen. Mazie Hirono, Alexis Goldstein and Sarah Burgess, alumnae of the Holton-Arms School, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, at a news conference in support of Christine Blasey Ford.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Sen. Mazie Hirono, Alexis Goldstein and Sarah Burgess, alumnae of the Holton-Arms School, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, at a news conference in support of Christine Blasey Ford.

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