The Press

Biden faces sexual assault claim

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A sexual assault allegation is raising Joe Biden’s first big challenge as the Democrats’ presidenti­al nominee, fuelling Republican attacks and leaving many in his own party in an uncomforta­ble bind.

Biden’s campaign has denied the allegation from his former Senate staffer Tara Reade, who has said Biden assaulted her in the basement of a Capitol Hill office building in the 1990s. But the story garnered fresh attention this week after two of Reade’s associates said she previously told them about elements of her allegation­s.

Republican­s who are worried about President Donald Trump’s increasing­ly precarious political standing are seizing on the allegation to portray Democrats as hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against conservati­ves. They are digging in despite the fact that it could renew attention on the multiple sexual assault allegation­s lodged against Trump.

Democrats, meanwhile, are in an awkward position of vigorously validating women who come forward with their stories while defending the man who will be their standard-bearer in what many in the party consider the most important election of their lifetimes.

The tension

is

heightened because Biden himself is saying nothing about the allegation.

Like many Americans, he has spent the past several weeks at home to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Biden has participat­ed in a handful of local and national interviews, during which he wasn’t asked about the allegation. But he hasn’t held a press briefing for the broader press corps that covers him since April 2, before multiple news organizati­ons reported Reade’s story.

The November contest between Biden and Trump will be the first presidenti­al race of the (hash)MeToo era, which has led numerous women to come forward with allegation­s of sexual assault. Trump himself has been accused of assault and unwanted touching by numerous women, allegation­s he denies. He was forced to apologise during the 2016 campaign after he was heard on a recording bragging about using his fame to assault women.

Women are a core constituen­cy for Democrats, and Biden has a mixed history. While he wrote the Violence Against Women Act as a senator, he also came under heavy criticism for his handling of Anita Hill’s Senate testimony in the 1990s. Just before he launched his 2020 campaign, several women accused him of unwanted touching, behaviour for which he apologized.

Biden has pledged to pick a woman as a running mate, and the allegation has left those thought to be in contention in a tough spot.

Stacey Abrams, the former Georgia Democratic governor candidate, said, ‘‘Women deserve to be heard, and I believe they need to be listened to, but I also believe that those allegation­s have to be investigat­ed by credible sources.’’ ‘‘The New York Times did a deep investigat­ion and they found that the accusation was not credible,’’ she added. ‘‘I believe Joe Biden.’’

That echoed talking points issued by the Biden campaign to surrogates last week that were obtained by The Associated Press.

They pointed to investigat­ions by The New York Times, The Washington Post and the AP that found no other allegation of sexual assault and no pattern of sexual misconduct.

Some Democratic donors and fundraiser­s say the issue has not come up in calls with party financiers.

Others worry that it could be used against Biden, much as Hillary Clinton’s private email server and the activities of the Clinton Foundation were wielded against her by Trump.

Some, most notably women, say they are paying close attention to the allegation­s, which gave them pause.

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Joe Biden

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