New York Post

Sex-Charge Hypocrite

Biden wouldn’t survive his own rules for colleges

- DAVID HARSANYI Twitter: @DavidHarsa­nyi

IT’S worth reminding people that if President Biden were compelled to live by the standards he intends to institute for college students accused of sexual misconduct, he would be presumed guilty of rape, denied any legitimate opportunit­y to refute Tara Reade’s charges and tossed from office in disgrace.

The New York Times reports that Biden’s Kafkaesque “White House Gender Policy Council” is “beginning his promised effort to dismantle Trump-era rules on sexual misconduct that afforded greater protection­s to students accused of assault.” The subhead informs us that “the Biden administra­tion will examine regulation­s by Betsy DeVos that gave the force of law to rules that granted more due process rights to students accused of sexual assault.”

The most disingenuo­us word here — though the piece is brimming with them — is “more.” History did not begin in 2015, and former Education Secretary DeVos did not invent more due-process rights in Title IX; she simply reinstated time-honored fundamenta­l due-process rights that have guided justice systems in the liberal world for hundreds of years. The Constituti­on says — twice — that no citizen shall be arbitraril­y “deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” No means no.

It was only in 2011 that the Obama administra­tion instituted fewer due-process rights through the force of law, denying the accused the ability to question accusers, the right to review the allegagoin­g tions and evidence presented by the accuser, the right to present exculpator­y evidence and the right to call witnesses. Basically, the right to mount a defense.

It was the Obama administra­tion that asked schools to institute a system that empowered a single investigat­or, often without any training and susceptibl­e to the vagaries of societal and political pressures, to pass unilateral judgment on these cases. Also, under the Obama administra­tion rules, colleges were allowed to adjudicate sexual abuse and assault cases using a “prepondera­nce of evidence” rather than a more stringent “clear and convincing evidence” standard.

Now, Jennifer Klein, the “Gender Policy Council” co-chair and chief of staff to First Lady Jill Biden, says “everybody involved” in a sexual complaint, “accused and accuser,” should be entitled to due process.

OK. Has anyone ever argued that the accuser’s right to come forward should be diminished or that the accused should be afforded fewer protection­s than any other American who says he or she is the victim of a crime? We should never diminish the pain and anguish that those who come forward with these charges go through. But the presumptio­n of innocence is a legal term based on a value system. And if the federal government is to dictate how colleges deal with sexual-assault accusation­s, it has a responsibi­lity to uphold the norms of the Constituti­on.

The good news is that between 2011 and 2021, a string of court cases repudiated Biden’s position. Hundreds of lawsuits were filed after 2011. A 2015 study by United Educators found that a quarter of Title IX claims had been challenged by students who either filed lawsuits in the federal courts or lodged complaints through the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. Dozens of schools, including Northweste­rn University, Dartmouth College and Yale, settled cases, while schools such as USC, Pennsylvan­ia State University, Ohio University, Hofstra, Boston College and Claremont McKenna all lost decisions.

Schools complained about the costs of implementi­ng due process, yet the average cost of settling these claims was around $350,000, with some going as high as $1 million.

This, not incidental­ly, also means that some people who are guilty of sexual assault will claim to be victims of flawed hearings or unfair sanctions simply because they can circumvent the norms of justice. Proper due process protects both the accuser and the accused.

At the very least, the state should ensure that students are afforded the same impartiali­ty, norms and protection­s that every one of us expects in the real world. Either we believe principles are the best means of fairness or not. Biden, it seems, only believes in them for himself.

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