Dayton Daily News

Trump tweets attack on Kavanaugh accuser

President suggests she must have filed with police if incident ‘bad.’

- By Alan Fram and Catherine Lucey

After holding his WASHINGTON — tongue for a week, President Donald Trump criticized the woman claiming a decades-old sexual assault by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, tweeting that if the episode was “as bad as she says,” she or “her loving parents” surely would have reported it to law enforcemen­t.

Trump’s reproach of Christine Blasey Ford on Friday defied the Senate Republican strategy — and the advice of White House aides — of not disparagin­g her while firmly defending his nominee and the tight timetable for confirming him.

The comment came as the California psychology professor’s attorneys sought agreement from Republican­s on terms under which she might testify at a Judiciary Committee hearing next week. That hearing, should it occur, could play out on national television and settle whether Kavanaugh’s nomination survives.

The president’s tweet brought rejoinders from Democrats and a mix of silence and sighs of regret from his own party. Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who hasn’t declared her position on Kavanaugh, called the remark “appalling.”

Kavanaugh, the 53-yearold District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals judge, has consistent­ly denied the accusation from his teenage years. Ford, 51, says an ine- briated Kavanaugh pinned her on a bed during a high school party in the 1980s, muffled her screams and tried undressing her before she escaped.

Minutes after Trump’s tweet on Friday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell drew a standing ovation when he assured a gathering of evangelica­l activists that the conservati­ve Kavanaugh would soon be a justice.

Acknowledg­ing the tumult Ford’s accusation has caused, McConnell said at the Values Voter Summit, “Keep the faith, don’t get rattled by it. We’re going to plow right through and do our jobs.”

McConnell has wanted to get Kavanaugh confirmed before the court’s new term starts Oct. 1 — and before November’s elections. He still hopes to do so despite the emergence of Ford’s allegation­s.

Until Friday, Trump’s strongest comment had been an expression of incredulit­y that Kavanaugh had committed an assault. His relatively restrained responses had some White House aides believing they had tamed his notoriousl­y undiscipli­ned impulses.

“The president doesn’t need anybody to tell him. He does the right thing,” presidenti­al counselor Kellyanne Conway told reporters Friday morning when asked if she’d advised him to not crit- icize Ford.

Minutes later he tweeted from Las Vegas, where he had spent the night after a political rally.

“I have no doubt that, if the attack on Dr. Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediatel­y filed with local Law Enforce- ment Authoritie­s by either her or her loving parents. I ask that she bring those fil- ings forward so that we can learn date, time, and place!” he wrote.

The remark infuriated many who’ve long argued that women are frequently overwhelme­d, confused and ashamed by sexual attacks and keep silent or even bury the memory without confiding with anyone.

Ford has said she never mentioned the alleged incident to anyone until 2012, when she revealed it during a marriage counseling session with her husband.

“A highly offensive misunderst­anding of surviving trauma,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., tweeted about Trump’s attack. Sen Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., called it “another disgusting attempt to discredit Dr. Ford,” while Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., tweeted, “It’s sad but not surprising that she’s been met with an utter lack of decency by elected leaders of this country.”

McConnell’s confident prediction of Kavanaugh’s impending confirmati­on came as the nomination seemed to be gaining momentum. GOP senators who’d voiced concern about Ford’s charges had stopped short of expressing opposition to Kavanaugh, and growing numbers of Republican­s said it was about time to vote.

Still, Kavanaugh’s fate remained unclear, with some saying that a hearing featuring him and Ford would be risky for the GOP.

xspokesman for Presi- dent George W. Bush, said

the tweet did not help party leaders corral moderates Collins and Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski, whose support in the 51-49 GOP-run Senate would likely be pivotal.

“Nobody has anything wired,” Fleischer said. “We’re watching events unfold. If she testifies, all bets are off.”

 ?? ETHAN MILLER / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump speaks Thursday at a rally in Las Vegas, where he was stumping for GOP Sen. Dean Heller’s re-election bid.
ETHAN MILLER / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump speaks Thursday at a rally in Las Vegas, where he was stumping for GOP Sen. Dean Heller’s re-election bid.
 ?? CHRISTY BOWE / GLOBE / ZUMA PRESS ?? Despite the claim of sexual assault against him, GOP momentum to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court is growing.
CHRISTY BOWE / GLOBE / ZUMA PRESS Despite the claim of sexual assault against him, GOP momentum to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court is growing.

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