Los Angeles Times

Trump doubts claim by judge’s accuser

He suggests the sexual assault allegation is driven by ‘radical left’ to stop Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on.

- By Eli Stokols, Noah Bierman and Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — In a Friday morning tweet storm after days of restraint, President Trump intensifie­d the controvers­y over his embattled Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, by expressing doubt about the woman accusing him of attempting to rape her when they were in high school.

Trump portrayed the allegation by Christine Blasey Ford, a research psychologi­st at Palo Alto University, as part of a partisan effort by Democrats to derail Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on. He repeated his declaratio­ns made throughout the week, including at a political rally in Las Vegas on Thursday night, that his nominee is a good person of eminent standing.

“Judge Brett Kavanaugh is a fine man, with an impeccable reputation, who is under assault by radical leftwing politician­s who don’t want to know the answers, they just want to destroy and delay,” Trump said in the first of three tweets. “Facts don’t matter. I go through this with them every single day in D.C.”

In a second tweet, Trump questioned why Ford, who has said she was 15 at the time, didn’t file charges after the alleged incident in 1982. He echoed some allies in conservati­ve legal circles who in recent days have attempted to sow doubts about her story.

“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 Enforcemen­t Authoritie­s by either her or her loving parents,” Trump tweeted. “I ask that she bring those filings forward so that we can learn date, time, and place!”

His third tweet underlined that point: “The radical left lawyers want the FBI to get involved NOW. Why didn’t someone call the FBI 36 years ago?”

Just days after stating that Ford’s story should be heard, Trump reverted to the more recalcitra­nt, partisan stance for which he’s better known, blaming the controvers­y on his usual foils, the media and Democrats. But the political risk of

his new tack was soon evident: Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, one of two undecided Republican moderates whose votes could decide Kavanaugh’s fate, condemned Trump’s tweets.

“I was appalled by the president’s tweet,” she said at an event in Maine, according to the Portland Press Herald.

“First of all, we know that allegation­s of sexual assault — I’m not saying that’s what happened in this case — but we know allegation­s of sexual assault are one of the most unreported crimes that exist. So I thought that the president’s tweet was completely inappropri­ate and wrong.”

Even as the #MeToo movement has elevated understand­ing of the frequency of sexual assault and harassment, and encouraged reporting, officials who help victims expressed concerns that Trump’s tweets would perpetuate stigmas that have long kept women from speaking up about such behavior.

The majority of women who experience assaults or harassment do not report the incidents and may wait years to tell even confidants about their experience­s, said Laura Palumbo, communicat­ions director for the National Sexual Violence Resource Center, a nonprofit public health and social services organizati­on.

“Whenever a victimblam­ing message is put out there, it really affirms the rape myths that silence survivors of sexual assault. And it adds to misinforma­tion and misunderst­anding about the issues of sexual assault harassment and abuse,” Palumbo said.

Soon after Trump’s tweets, the hashtag #WhyIDidntR­eport was trending on Twitter as women posted their reasons for keeping silent after sexual assaults.

By going on the attack, the president was certain to unnerve other Republican­s given the huge political stakes in this fight less than two months ahead of November’s midterm election. Yet that shift tracks with his own long-standing denials of sexual abuse allegation­s against him from multiple women; he has called them liars, provoking one to pursue a defamation suit against him.

His reversal of strategy also laid bare divisions within the West Wing about how to handle the sensitive allegation­s, offering the latest example of the president following his own instincts over the advice and public comments of top aides.

Kellyanne Conway, the president’s counselor, first said earlier in the week that Ford “should not be ignored and should not be insulted. She should be heard.” On Friday after appearing on CNN, where she took a harder line against Ford, she told reporters at the White House that she hadn’t had to advise the president not to attack Kavanaugh’s accuser.

“The president doesn’t need anybody to tell him,” she said. “He does the right thing.”

Trump sent his first tweet undercutti­ng Ford and her allegation a minute later.

White House communicat­ions director Bill Shine, who lost his job as a top executive at Fox News over his handling of sexual misconduct allegation­s there, subsequent­ly became a top advisor to Trump in July. Asked on Friday whether Trump’s tweets mark a strategic shift, Shine in a text message said only that the White House “fully supports Judge Kavanaugh.”

The White House would not address whether Trump’s tweets signaled that the administra­tion was in effect questionin­g the credibilit­y of any woman who reports a sexual assault years later. Instead, officials focused on the immediate fight with Senate Democrats over how to proceed toward a vote on Kavanaugh, fearful that if the story became one about the president battling Ford, Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on could be put in danger.

Separately in yet another tweet, Trump wrote that California Sen. Dianne Feinstein and other Democrats had Ford’s initial letter alleging Kavanaugh’s attack “for months, only to release it with a bang after the hearings were OVER — done very purposeful­ly to Obstruct & Resist & Delay.”

Feinstein has said that she kept the allegation a secret at the request of Ford, who demanded privacy but then went public after reports of her accusation leaked.

Trump’s decision to lean in to this fight suggests an effort to sway public opinion ahead of a possible hearing on the accusation next week. Kavanaugh, who continues to deny Ford’s allegation, has offered to appear again before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday.

Ford has signaled a willingnes­s to testify before the same committee next week, although her attorneys have said that she will not be able to appear on Monday, the day initially proposed by Sen. Charles E. Grassley (RIowa), the committee chairman.

Negotiatio­ns between Ford’s attorney and the committee reached a fevered pitch late Friday.

Grassley scheduled a committee vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination for Monday, but said that he would cancel it if he heard from Ford by 10 p.m. Friday and that the committee would agree to a Wednesday hearing. “We cannot continue to delay,” he said.

In a letter to Ford’s attorneys, Grassley agreed to the demands to allow just one camera to be in the hearing room and to limit news media access, provide breaks during the testimony and keep Kavanaugh out of the room while Ford testifies.

But he balked at the demands that Kavanaugh testify first, that only senators — and not committee attorneys — ask questions and that subpoenas be issued to compel Mark Judge and other potential witnesses to testify.

Democrats accused Republican­s of doing anything it took to get a conservati­ve on the Supreme Court.

“Bullying a survivor of attempted rape in order to confirm a nominee — particular­ly at a time when she’s receiving death threats — is an extreme abuse of power,” said Feinstein, the top Democrat on the panel.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Friday promised conservati­ve activists that Kavanaugh would still get confirmed.

“Don’t get rattled by all of this. We’re going to plow right through it and do our job,” he told an audience of conservati­ves at the Values Voters Summit in Washington. “In the very near future, Judge Kavanaugh will be on the United States Supreme Court.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP said on Twitter: “I have no doubt that, if the attack on Dr. Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediatel­y filed.”
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP said on Twitter: “I have no doubt that, if the attack on Dr. Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediatel­y filed.”

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