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Congress moves to tackle sexual harassment

Mandatory training on sexual harassment and discrimina­tion will be adopted

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The House of Representa­tives will adopt mandatory training on sexual harassment and discrimina­tion, Speaker Paul Ryan said on Tuesday after members of Congress shared stories of women being propositio­ned and groped in the halls of the US Capitol.

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

Ryan announced the new policy as a first step in the House’s review of sexual harassment policies after women lawmakers related in unflinchin­g detail accounts of harassment and intimidati­on by House members and staff in Congress.

The Committee on House Administra­tion held a hearing on sexual harassment policies against a backdrop of social outrage over sexual misconduct by powerful men that began with allegation­s by multiple women against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. He has denied having non-consensual sex with anyone.

Roy Moore, the Republican US Senate candidate from Alabama, has faced allegation­s by five women accusing him of sexual misconduct when they were teenagers. Ryan and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell have urged Moore to drop out of the race. Moore has denied the allegation­s.

Inexcusabl­e, illegal

US Representa­tive Jackie Speier told the panel that two current House members, a Republican and a Democrat, had engaged in sexual harassment. She did not identify the lawmakers.

She said numerous staff members, both men and women, had been subjected to inexcusabl­e and often illegal behaviour.

They included “victims having their private parts grabbed on the House floor,” she said.

Speier later told MSNBC: “We do know that about $15 million has been paid out by the House on behalf of harassers in the last 10 to 15 years,” including one taxpayer-funded settlement on behalf of one of the current House members.

About 1,500 former congressio­nal staffers have urged the House and Senate leadership to address the issue.

The Senate passed a resolution last week to require training. Democratic US Senator Amy Klobuchar, a lead sponsor of that measure, said the next step was to make changes in how harassment complaints are handled.

“You wonder why there’s only 21 women in the Senate or why there’s no women running Hollywood studios or there’s hardly any women running major businesses,” Klobuchar told reporters.

“Well, when you have a work environmen­t where people can’t get ahead without having to put out, that’s what happens.”

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