The Columbus Dispatch

Moore’s wife, others fighting for candidate

- By Kim Chandler

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Standing on the white marble steps of Alabama’s Capitol, Kayla Moore surrounded herself with two dozen other women Friday to defend husband Roy Moore against accusation­s of sexual misconduct that are dividing Republican­s, and women in particular.

“He will not step down. He will not stop fighting for the people of Alabama,” Kayla Moore said at a “Women for Moore” rally. She lashed out at the news media and thanked people who were sticking behind her husband. “To the people of Alabama, thank you for being smarter than they think you are,” Moore said.

Not everyone is sticking with Roy Moore, however, and certainly not all women.

“I was going to be one of his voters. I just don’t know that I can vote for him anymore,” said Laura Payne, a Donald Trump delegate to the 2016 Republican National Convention.

Since last week, Moore has been engulfed by accusation­s of sexual misconduct toward women in their teens when he was a deputy district attorney in his 30s. Several of his accusers have allowed their identities to be made public.

“I have not found any reason not to believe them. … They risked a whole lot to come forward,” Payne said of the accusers.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said she also has no reason to disbelieve the women and is bothered by their allegation­s. But Ivey said she will vote for Moore anyway for the sake of GOP power in Congress.

“We need to have a Republican in the United States Senate to vote on things like Supreme Court justices, other appointmen­ts that the Senate has to confirm and make major decisions,” Ivey said.

Moore has ignored mounting calls from Washington Republican­s concerned that if he stays in the race against Democrat Doug Jones he may not only lose a seat they were sure to win but also may do significan­t damage to the party’s brand among women nationwide as they prepare for a difficult midterm election season.

Republican­s typically have a lock on statewide elections in Alabama, but even before the sexual accusation­s, Democrats hoped to stand a chance against the polarizing jurist who was twice removed from chief justice duties because of defying court orders regarding the Ten Commandmen­ts and gay marriage.

A Fox News poll released Thursday, a week after the first accusation­s, showed Jones leading Moore by eight points. Support from women was helping to give Jones the edge with 68 percent for Jones compared with 32 percent for Moore.

One of them is longtime Republican Tracy James, who worked for former senator and current U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Her cousin was a Republican governor. She won’t vote for Moore, a decision she made before the election.

“My hope is that the Moore debacle will not only be a wake- up call for evangelica­ls, but also for Republican­s, who should stand back and say, ‘Wow, look at the kind of person we almost elected to our ranks,’” James said.

But Kayla Moore, who is 14 years younger than her husband, said he is exactly the kind of person who needs to be in the Senate, and others at the Statehouse rally in Montgomery agreed.

“I do not recognize the man these ladies are describing,” Ann Eubank, a fixture in Alabama Republican politics, said of the accusers.

 ?? [BRYNN ANDERSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Kayla Moore, right, speaks at a news conference Friday in support of her husband, Senate candidate Roy Moore, in Montgomery, Ala.
[BRYNN ANDERSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Kayla Moore, right, speaks at a news conference Friday in support of her husband, Senate candidate Roy Moore, in Montgomery, Ala.

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