The Oklahoman

Blaming the messenger doesn’t falsify the message

- Ruth Marcus ruthmarcus@ washpost.com

Amere allegation. If true. White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, she who has encountere­d no argument too weak to embrace, had this to say about allegation­s that Republican senate candidate Roy Moore molested a 14-year-old girl: “Like most Americans the president believes we cannot allow a mere allegation, in this case one from many years ago, to destroy a person’s life. However, the president also believes that if these allegation­s are true, Judge

Moore will do the right thing and step aside.”

So many things to unpack in these 46 words. Let’s start with the elephant in the quote, the uncomforta­ble fact that President Trump was himself the target of such years-old “mere” allegation­s, more than a dozen, from women who claimed that he sexually assaulted them. These were, as thencandid­ate Trump assured us — and as Sanders, ever willing, reasserted just last month — all “horrible liars,” who would be duly sued after the election. Still waiting, Mr. President.

Trump’s convenient­ly flexible standard on accusation­s, and he is not alone, boils down to: If the accuser points a finger at a Democrat — Bill Clinton, Harvey Weinstein — her word is to be trusted, automatica­lly. If she complains about a Republican, Trump’s otherwise dormant devotion to due process kicks in. How can claims from “many years ago” be allowed to “destroy a person’s life”?

Some answers: Because they are entirely credible. Because the girl, now a woman, has no conceivabl­e ax to grind — she is a longtime Republican, a Trump voter even— and nothing to gain from coming forward. Because three other women related similar, although less disturbing stories, underscori­ng Moore’s interest in younger girls.

Because the presumptio­n of innocence, while essential in the legal realm, does not mean the eliminatio­n of common sense outside it. (Thank you, Mitt Romney, for saying that.) The willing suspension of disbelief has its limits, or should.

Unless, that is, you are a politician dealing with a story you wish would go away. Then you turn instinctiv­ely to if-then-ism. “If these allegation­s are true ... ,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said initially (on Monday, he said Moore should step aside). “If it’s true ... ,” said Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski. “If the allegation­s,” said West Virginia’s Shelley Moore Capito. “If there is any truth at all to these horrific allegation­s ... ,” said Maine’s Susan Collins. Seriously, have you read this story? How can you think about serving alongside this man?

The correct response came from Arizona Sen. John McCain, who, without hedging, termed the allegation­s “deeply disturbing and disqualify­ing” and called on Moore to withdraw.

If-then-ism is the rhetorical cousin of whatabout-ism, a bid to deflect attention by questionin­g whether those complainin­g about “x” were equally inflamed by “y,” when “y” involved someone on their side. If-then-ism represents a similar effort to avoid casting a politicall­y inconvenie­nt judgment.

It is better, sure, than the jawdroppin­g alternativ­e: so-what-ism, remarkably flagrant among Alabamians in response to the Moore report. “Much ado about nothing,” state Auditor Jim Zeigler told the Washington Examiner.

If-then-ism, by contrast, is pure cowardly dodge. There are some situations where the fact pattern may be too murky to pass judgment. Not here. What more informatio­n do the if-then-ers want? What would be the forum for this factual discovery to take place?

One last strategy — blame-themesseng­er — has come into play here, deployed by Moore and supporters like former Trump adviser Steve Bannon. “The Bezos Amazon Washington Post that dropped that dime on Donald Trump is the same Bezos Amazon Washington Post that dropped the dime this afternoon on Judge Roy Moore,” Bannon said, referring to Post owner Jeff Bezos and the “Access Hollywood” tape. “Now is that a coincidenc­e?”

No, it’s not. Good reporting breeds good reporting. Post reporters did an incredible job with those stories, as they did in helping break the Monica Lewinsky story two decades ago.

Blaming the messenger is always easier than hearing an unwelcome message. It does not make that message any less true.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States