The National - News

TRUMP, THE TRUTH, AND AN ELECTION RACE LIKE NO OTHER

▶ Senate hopeful faces slew of allegation­s but president says they’re ‘fake news.’

- By Rob Crilly

Republican leaders are rallying in support of Roy Moore, their candidate in Alabama’s special senate election today despite allegation­s of sexual misconduct with teenage girls.

The president, Donald Trump, who initially backed a different candidate for the Republican nomination, recorded a telephone message for waverers saying a vote for Mr Moore was a vote for his “Make America Great Again” agenda.

But a string of allegation­s that the former judge chased after teenage girls when he was in his 30s has turned a solid Republican seat into a tight contest.

It pits Mr Moore, a 70-yearold conservati­ve Christian and former state judge, against Doug Jones, a 63-year-old former US attorney, in perhaps the biggest test yet of Mr Trump’s energetic base, and whether voters are prepared to dismiss serious allegation­s about a candidate as “fake news”.

The president offered a full-throated endorsemen­t of Mr Moore on Friday at a rally just across the state line in Pensacola, Florida.

On Sunday, details of his robocall emerged.

“We need Roy voting for us and stopping illegal immigratio­n and crime, rebuilding a stronger military and protecting the second amendment and our pro-life values,” he said in a recording obtained by ABC News. “But if Alabama elects liberal Democrat Doug Jones, all of our progress will be stopped full.”

Mr Trump’s position puts party agenda ahead of worries about Mr Moore’s past.

Several women have accused him of sexual misconduct. The accusation­s include driving a 14-year-old girl to his home in the woods, where he allegedly assaulted her.

Mr Moore has refused calls to quit.

However, he all but disappeare­d from the campaign trail as the controvers­y dominated the final week.

He surfaced on Sunday for an interview with The Voice of

Alabama Politics on local cable TV to repeat his denials, claiming he was the victim of “ritual defamation”.

“I did not know them,” he said of his accusers. “I had no encounter with them. I never molested anyone and for them to say that, I don’t know why they’re saying it, but it’s not true.”

The controvers­y has Democrats sensing a win-win scenario: either they pick up the seat and narrow the Republican senate majority to 51-49 or Mr Moore’s presence in Washington gives them an easy target.

Dozens of men have been forced from positions of power in politics, the media and Hollywood after The New York

Times revealed how Harvey Weinstein had used his status as a giant of the film world to harass and abuse women.

Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the United Nations, gave an insight into the sea change in American society when she said that any woman who has felt violated or mistreated by a man has a right to speak out, even if she was accusing Mr Trump.

“Women who accuse anyone should be heard,” Ms Haley said on CBS’s Face the Nation.

“They should be heard, and they should be dealt with.”

Yet Mr Moore’s strategy of denial has kept him in the race so far. Although one poll had him trailing his Democratic rival by four points earlier this month, that lead is reversed in a running average of surveys maintained by Real Clear Politics.

Nate Lerner, the executive director of the Democratic Coalition, who is campaignin­g for Mr Jones in the state, said the blanket denials had worn down Republican voters.

“I think they got numb to it,” he said. “I think you are seeing some of those supporters who initially jumped ship trickling back, which is why the polls remain so close.”

He said that the allegation­s have made it harder to remind voters that Mr Moore was a divisive candidate before any hint of a sex scandal emerged.

He has argued that homosexual­ity should be illegal and is opposed to gay marriage, a stance that last year led to him being suspended as the state’s chief justice for telling judges to ignore a supreme court ruling legalising same-sex unions.

He was removed from the same post in 2003 when he ignored a court order demanding he remove a granite monument to the Ten Commandmen­ts from outside the Alabama Judicial Building.

But his conservati­ve positions have won him the backing of Steve Bannon, Mr Trump’s former chief strategist. He was due to campaign in the state yesterday as he assembles a line-up of candidates to reshape the Republican party in the president’s populist image.

As a result, allegation­s of sexual misconduct have been dismissed as part of a liberal conspiracy by some voters, Mr Lerner said.

“It has almost rallied his base, made it us versus them, solidified his support and made them sceptical about anything coming out of the Jones camp,” he said.

The same goes for Republican leaders. The national party leadership is now backing his campaign, reversing its position from a fortnight ago.

And the majority of state officials, with one eye on their own re-election battles next year and wary of crossing an energetic Trump base, are also backing Mr Moore, according to The Associated Press.

That leaves moderate Republican­s with a dilemma. They could write in an alternativ­e name on their ballots – such as Lee Busby, a retired marine colonel who entered the race once the papers had already been finalised – or simply stay at home.

Either way, the special election in Alabama, where a controvers­ial candidate is endorsed by a polarising president, could provide the first indication­s of how next year’s pivotal congressio­nal midterms will play out.

Some of those supporters who initially jumped ship are trickling back, which is why the polls remain so close NATE LERNER Executive director, Democratic Coalition

 ?? AP ?? Republican Roy Moore faces a tough fight for the Alabama seat in the US senate
AP Republican Roy Moore faces a tough fight for the Alabama seat in the US senate
 ?? AP; Reuters ?? Doug Jones, left, is the Democratic senatorial candidate running against Roy Moore. Beverly Nelson, left, with attorney Gloria Allred alleged sexual misconduct against Mr Moore
AP; Reuters Doug Jones, left, is the Democratic senatorial candidate running against Roy Moore. Beverly Nelson, left, with attorney Gloria Allred alleged sexual misconduct against Mr Moore
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