The Denver Post

Trump is wrong to attack women, push for vote

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President Donald Trump doesn’t have to believe the stories of sexual misconduct and assault being told by Coloradan Deborah Ramirez and California­n Christine Blasey Ford, but he should take their accusation­s seriously, pledge to investigat­e and treat these two women with respect.

Instead Trump tweeted on Friday: “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. I ask that she bring those filings forward so that we can learn date, time, and place!”

The president showed even less restraint when talking about Ramirez who came forward over the weekend to say she remembers Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh exposing himself to her in a dormitory at Yale University.

“She was totally inebriated and all messed up and she doesn’t know. It might have been him, or it might have been him. Gee, let’s not make him a Supreme Court judge. This is a con game being played by the Democrats,” Trump said Tuesday in an interview with reporters.

Those are precisely the type of despicable remarks that encourage women not to report sexual assault, sexual harassment or domestic violence. How many examples do we need as a nation of credible reports being brought forward decades afterthefa­ct because boys, girls, men and women were shamed into silence?

Jerry Sandusky, Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, Larry Nassar, and too many Catholic priests to mention by name have faced justice years after their crimes because of brave victims who came forward. And heaven help the first victim in almost all of those cases who were met with disbelief and anger at their accusation­s before other victims came forward to corroborat­e their stories.

Trump and his fellow Republican Senators may want Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court, but they should also want to make sure they don’t elevate someone to the highest court in the land without fully investigat­ing these claims.

Sen. Michael Bennet has called for an FBI investigat­ion into the accounts of Ford and Ramirez, saying in a Tweet that “the nomination process should not move forward until the FBI investigat­es these allegation­s.”

We agree.

Every senator should be uncomforta­ble voting to put someone on the Supreme Court for life without fully investigat­ing these two claims, and we think that calls for more than just having Ford and Ramirez testify under oath before the Senate Judiciary Committee — although that is a good place to start.

This isn’t a question of criminal dueprocess that requires Senators to determine if Kavanaugh is guilty of these alleged crimes. This is a question of employment at the highest level of an honored profession and we are uncomforta­ble with someone taking a job on the U.S. Supreme Court while facing allegation­s of this nature.

Sen. Cory Gardner, a Republican representi­ng Colorado, has tremendous power as one of the deciding votes on any confirmati­on.

His staff so far has said “Senator Gardner absolutely supports efforts by the Senate Judiciary Committee to gather more informatio­n and investigat­e these claims.”

We hope he is using his position to push the committee members to do the right thing, just as Trump is using his position to push them to do the wrong thing.

Members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are Megan Schrader, editor of the editorial pages; Lee Ann Colacioppo, editor; Justin Mock, CFO; Bill Reynolds, vice president of circulatio­n and production; Bob Kinney, vice president of informatio­n technology; and TJ Hutchinson, systems editor.

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