The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Shift moves in Roy Moore’s favor

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After all that has happened, the Alabama Senate race appears to be reverting to a fundamenta­l political truth: A state that is one of the most Republican in the nation is likely to vote Republican.

Of course, there is still the possibilit­y of some new and devastatin­g sexual misconduct revelation about GOP candidate Roy Moore. But there is an increasing sense that the old and devastatin­g sexual misconduct revelation­s are receding into the distant past of two weeks ago. Now, Moore is recovering in the polls and more Alabama voters seem comfortabl­e with the idea of voting for him.

Moore was six points ahead of Democratic opponent Doug Jones in the RealClearP­olitics average of polls before the first allegation­s. By Nov. 21, Moore was eight-tenths of a point behind Jones. Now, Moore is back in the lead, but by just 2.6 points.

It appears the improvemen­t in Moore’s fortunes is being driven by a gradual change in the Alabama electorate’s view of the allegation­s against him. In a Morning Consult poll taken in mid-November, 43 percent said they found the sexual misconduct allegation­s against Moore to be credible, while 19 percent said not credible, and 37 percent said they did not know or had no opinion.

In a newer poll by the same company, taken in the last week of November, 41 percent said they found the allegation­s credible, 21 percent said not credible, and 41 percent said they did not know or had no opinion.

Part of the change — perhaps a large part — seems to reflect the idea that many voters don’t view Moore’s accusers in the same way that many media figures do. A number of media reports portray overwhelmi­ng evidence against Moore. “He’s pitting his word against the word of nine women who accused him of varying degrees of sexual misconduct,” CNN reported recently. The message is that the sheer number of accusers means at least some must be telling the truth.

But it seems likely that some Alabama voters don’t see nine accusers. They see one.

That one accuser is Leigh Corfman, who says Moore sexually assaulted her in 1979, when she was 14 years old. Published in the Washington Post, Corfman’s was the first and most serious allegation against Moore, and it remains the most serious today. Corfman has seemed credible in media appearance­s, and Moore has not been able to refute her story. The Moore campaign realizes Corfman’s is the most compelling allegation against him.

But the Post account also included the stories of three other women who said Moore asked them out when they were 16, 17 and 18 years old, and whose cases against Moore did not involve any physical abuse or coercion.

Then there was Beverly Young Nelson, who said Moore assaulted her in 1977, when she was 16. Nelson made the mistake of retaining celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred when she made her allegation­s, and she also mishandled Moore’s contention that a signature in a yearbook she produced, ostensibly by Moore, might be a fake. Both moves reduced her credibilit­y.

So that is five accusers right there. It is likely that voters pushed four of them to the side, leaving Corfman.

The point is not that none of the accusers is telling the truth. Perhaps some, or all, are. What appears to have happened is that one very serious allegation was followed by a series of less serious, or less credible, accusation­s that in the end did not have the cumulative effect that Moore’s opponents perhaps hoped.

The bottom line is, instead of Roy Moore versus nine accusers, in many voters’ minds, the story is Roy Moore versus one accuser, Leigh Corfman. And that is where the mental calculatio­ns begin.

Corfman’s allegation is serious; she was, after all, 14 years old. But it’s not airtight. And it was in 1979 — 38 years ago. Memories fade, or change. And even if it is all true, has Moore changed in the nearly four decades since? Is there a statute of political limitation­s? Thoughts like that can change minds.

Finally, many conservati­ve voters see Jones as a doctrinair­e liberal whose pro-choice views on abortion would likely be enough to ensure defeat in an Alabama race.

And so Alabama Republican­s are more and more assessing the situation as Alabama Republican­s. It would be no surprise if they vote that way on Dec. 12.

 ??  ?? Byron York Columnist
Byron York Columnist

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