The Jerusalem Post

What in heaven’s name?

- • By DOUGLAS BLOOMFIELD

What in God’s name were they thinking? No, not Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore when he allegedly groped underage girls half his age, and not Donald Trump when he boasted of his adulterous affairs, groin grabbing and sexual prowess. You don’t need a degree in psychiatry to know what those two sexual predators had on their minds.

What I’m referring to is all those white Evangelica­ls who stand by pedophiles and philandere­rs even as they loudly proclaim their devotion to “family values.”

Since Alabama Senate candidate Moore was accused by five different women of sexual assault when they were teens and he was in his thirties, his support among Evangelica­ls has held steady.

Some Evangelica­l leaders suggest that’s because what counts is not the candidates’ behavior but whether they will fight to enact the religious Right’s agenda and deliver more than prayers.

They like Trump because he is anti-abortion, opposes Planned Parenthood, opposes immigratio­n, wants to break the wall separating church and state, brings religious extremists like Mike Pence into high office and puts them on the bench, and he wants people to say “Merry Christmas” instead of “Happy Holiday.”

Many, particular­ly in places like Alabama, also see in Trump a candidate who is a white man born in this country, not a woman or a person of color who may not be Christian or native born. They’re telling reporters they’d rather vote for an accused pedophile than a Democrat.

A study by the Public Religion Research Institute found “moral rectitude wasn’t as important to Evangelica­l voters as it once was – and that many believed a person who acts immorally in their personal lives still can serve morally in office,” The Washington Post reported.

Fourteen Republican senators have called for Moore to step aside, as this is written. Only one is a woman – Susan Collins of Maine. The other four Republican women – Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Joni Ernst of Iowa, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia and Deb Fischer of Nebraska – have said nothing or taken the cop-out “if true he should step aside.” (Incidental­ly, there are 16 female Democratic senators.)

Moore was unfit before the current allegation­s became public.

He repeatedly declared his view that the rights of the states superseded those of the federal government and that his version of the Protestant Bible took precedence over the US Constituti­on.

Moore has been popular in Alabama for standing up to the federal courts, even though that twice got him removed as chief justice of the Alabama supreme court. First when he put a granite block engraved with the Ten Commandmen­ts in the Supreme Court building, and then when he tried to block issuing marriage licenses for same-sex couples.

Moore is threatenin­g to sue the Washington Post over the story of his pursuit of teenage girls. He may file a suit but after getting the immediate publicity he seeks, he will quickly drop it because the last thing he wants is to be questioned under oath and on the record by the Post’s lawyers.

Steve Bannon, Trump’s former strategic adviser now running Breitbart News, stands firmly behind Moore, whom he made the poster boy for his insurgency campaign to overthrow the GOP establishm­ent and reshape the party in the image of his protégé, Trump.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky), Bannon’s top target, has suggested Sessions would be a good choice as a write-in candidate should Moore step aside.

That would please Trump, who makes no secret of his desire to get rid of his attorney general.

He is still angry with Sessions for recusing himself in the Russiagate investigat­ion, which led to the firing of FBI director James Comey and appointmen­t of special counsel Robert Mueller.

It is at that point that the investigat­ion went from looking into Russia’s role in the election to possible high crimes and misdemeano­rs by the president himself. Trump revealed in an NBC interview and in an Oval Office meeting with top Russian officials that he dumped Comey to stop the FBI investigat­ion of then-national security adviser Mike Flynn.

Flynn was fired ostensibly for lying to the vice president, but he may best be remembered for his cheerleadi­ng at Trump campaign rallies and the Republican convention.

While Trump was telling excited crowds that if elected he’d order his attorney general to open a criminal investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton, Flynn was leading chants of “Lock her up.”

Ironically, Flynn may be the one headed to prison for his unregister­ed work for foreign government­s. His name could be on one of possibly four sealed indictment­s reportedly handed down by the grand jury.

If Sessions goes, Trump is expected to appoint a new attorney general who will fire Mueller and end the Russiagate investigat­ions, but it may be too late and too unpopular even among Republican­s.

Sessions has been anxious to keep his job and is under pressure from some House Republican­s to execute the president’s campaign promise by naming a second special counsel to investigat­e Clinton. He told Congress his staff is exploring it. Trump will also want the new prosecutor to go after another of his enemies, Comey, who he calls a “liar” and a “leaker.”

There is no precedent in US history for a president to launch a criminal investigat­ion of his former opponent. But Trump is unpreceden­ted as well as unschooled in history. He is also vengeful and obsessed with the legitimacy of his election, which he won in the Electoral College but lost by three million in the popular vote tally.

While no American president has ever prosecuted his former opponents, there is precedent among foreign leaders Trump particular­ly admires, including Vladimir Putin in Russia, Xi Jinping in China, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Egypt, Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippine­s, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey and even Kim Jong-un in North Korea. Granted, not all the losers were hauled into court – some went directly to jail and others didn’t live that long.

A Moore victory on December 12 would be a mixed bag for both parties. The Republican­s would keep their two-seat advantage in the Senate but that comes with the albatross of an accused pedophile who is unlikely to be a team player. For the Democrats it provides a campaign asset to keep Jews voting for the party in overwhelmi­ng numbers, and it will help build on the gains Democrats made last month among women voters in Virginia and other races.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A POSTER in Alabama encourages voters to elect Roy Moore to the US Senate.
(Reuters) A POSTER in Alabama encourages voters to elect Roy Moore to the US Senate.
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