Los Angeles Times

Alabama GOP stands by Senate candidate Moore

‘He deserves to be presumed innocent,’ state party head says.

- By Michael Finnegan and Jenny Jarvie michael.finnegan @latimes.com Finnegan reported from Los Angeles and special correspond­ent Jarvie from Birmingham. Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro in Washington contribute­d to this report.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Roy Moore won a reprieve in his struggle to survive as a U.S. Senate candidate Thursday when the Alabama Republican Party affirmed it would continue backing him despite allegation­s that he sexually assaulted teenagers.

“Judge Moore has vehemently denied the allegation­s made against him,” state GOP Chairwoman Terry Lathan said in a statement announcing the decision of a party steering committee to stand by Moore. “He deserves to be presumed innocent of the accusation­s unless proven otherwise. He will continue to take his case straight to the people of Alabama.”

She framed the election as a contrast between Moore, a conservati­ve who backs President Trump, and a Democrat who would thwart Trump’s agenda.

“We trust the Alabama voters in this election to have our beloved state and nation’s best interest at heart,” she said.

Trump, who has faced his own accusation­s of sexual harassment and assault, declined to join fellow Republican­s in urging Moore to drop out of the race.

“Look, the president believes that these allegation­s are very troubling and should be taken seriously, and he thinks that the people of Alabama should make the decision on who their next senator should be,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said at a briefing Thursday in Washington.

Asked to explain his distinctio­n between the allegation­s against Moore and the ones against Trump, she said: “I think the president has certainly a lot more insight into what he personally did or didn’t do, and he spoke out about that directly during the campaign.”

Moore’s troubles come as a burst of sexual harassment allegation­s has shaken the worlds of media, business and politics, most recently when a Los Angeles radio anchor said Thursday that Democratic Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota had groped and forcibly kissed her in 2006. Franken apologized.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey confirmed that she would not postpone the election, as some Republican­s in Washington have suggested.

Moore gathered in Birmingham with leaders of the religious right Thursday to show solidarity in fighting what he called the “scurrilous false allegation­s” that started emerging last week in the Washington Post. He blamed Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell for the barrage of accusation­s.

“This is an effort by Mitch McConnell and his cronies to steal this election from the people of Alabama, and they will not stand for it,” he said after 90 minutes of testimonia­ls by religious conservati­ves.

The scandal has imperiled Republican­s’ lock on the Senate seat vacated by Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, giving Democrats a startling opportunit­y to weaken the GOP’s already fragile 52-48 vote majority.

A Moore defeat in the Dec. 12 special election would mark an extraordin­ary breach in the Deep South’s allegiance to the Republican Party. The scandal has given Democrat Doug Jones a realistic shot at winning the seat.

A Fox News poll released Thursday found Jones leading Moore among likely voters, 50% to 42%.

The allegation­s have threatened to undercut Moore’s standing in this strongly conservati­ve state. One woman, Leigh Corfman, says that Moore molested her when she was 14 and he was 32, sexually touching her after the two stripped to their underwear.

Another woman, Beverly Young Nelson, says Moore sexually assaulted her when she was 16 and he was 30, grabbing her breasts and bruising her neck when he shoved her face into his crotch.

A third woman, Tina Johnson, says Moore grabbed her buttocks when she visited his law office in 1991, when she was 28.

Multiple other women say Moore made unwanted advances when they were teenagers.

Moore, 70, has denied all the allegation­s. He says he never met Corfman, and he has accused Nelson of producing a forged Moore signature in her high school yearbook to back up her allegation.

Leaders of the Republican Party have withdrawn their support from Moore. However, apart from Sen. Richard C. Shelby, who suggested Moore should consider stepping aside, Alabama’s GOP establishm­ent has stuck by Moore.

“A lot of the stuff that’s out there is already being disproved,” said Rep. Bradley Byrne (R-Ala.). “As time goes along, you’re going to find some other things are going to be disproved.”

Nonetheles­s, K.B. Forbes, a veteran GOP campaign operative who lives in Alabama and used to support Moore, started a super PAC on Thursday to support Jones.

“We are encouragin­g lifelong Republican­s to do the honorable thing: vote against pedophilia and sexual misconduct,” Forbes said.

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? ROY MOORE, center, with wife Kayla. A Fox News poll released Thursday found Democrat Doug Jones leading Moore among likely Alabama voters, 50% to 42%.
Drew Angerer Getty Images ROY MOORE, center, with wife Kayla. A Fox News poll released Thursday found Democrat Doug Jones leading Moore among likely Alabama voters, 50% to 42%.

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