Gulf Today

ALABAMA VOTERS KNOW ENOUGH

Roy Moore is not in trouble because of something terrible he’s supposed to have said. He’s in trouble because of something terrible he’s supposed to have done. Of course it’s possible that he’s done nothing at all. But the court of public opinion has its

- BY STEPHEN L. CARTER

Any day, Republican nominee Roy Moore will almost certainly end his campaign to represent Alabama in the US Senate. When that happens, his partisans will say - as they are saying now - that even though he’s been accused of sexual misconduct, none of the charges have been proved. In other words, say Moore’s supporters, the candidate has been denied the presumptio­n of innocence. They’re at best half right. Moore, who had a controvers­ial tenure as the state’s chief justice, has been accused of (among other things) an improper relationsh­ip with a 14-year-old girl and, most recently, sexual assault. He denies everything, but his lead in next month’s special election has collapsed. Yet nothing’s been proved in a court of law. Does this mean he’s a victim of a partisan witch hunt? Well, no.

As I’ve argued in this space before, it’s easy to misunderst­and the presumptio­n of innocence. When a defendant faces criminal trial, the rule is part of the toolkit that reduces the likelihood that the state will take away life or liberty unless we are very sure of guilt. Although mistakes still happen, there would be a lot more of them in the absence of the presumptio­n.

But the presumptio­n simply tells us who has the burden of producing evidence. It doesn’t tell us how much evidence has to be produced. Criminal trials require proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Most civil proceeding­s demand proof of only a prepondera­nce of the evidence - the standard of more probably than not. The presumptio­n of innocence doesn’t supply the standard of evidence; it tells us who wins if there isn’t any.

HOW MUCH EVIDENCE?

How much evidence do we require to make decisions in everyday life? Most of the time, for most of our decisions, a good deal less than a jury might need. If girlfriend suspects boyfriend of cheating, we don’t say that she acts unjustly if she breaks up with boyfriend on less proof than would be required in a court of law. If Washington tells her buddy Adams that there was a rat under her table at Jefferson’s restaurant, Adams won’t say, “I’ll wait for formal adjudicati­on.” Adams will stop going, and will probably spread the word.

These actions aren’t irrational. The approach we have evolved for criminal conviction doesn’t apply to every area of life. We make decisions all day long based on evidence that would not persuade a jury.

One might argue, plausibly, that political candidates are entitled to a stronger presumptio­n of innocence because they are more likely than the rest of us to be the target of spurious charges. Fair enough. But we can’t reasonably conclude that because trumped-up charges are more likely at election time, the better course is to treat all accusation­s as false.

Each voter is a jury - a jury of one. Each voter has to weigh the evidence and decide whether the charges are likely to be true. Ideally, we should be principled about the whole thing, especially at election time. If a certain amount of proof will sufice to persuade us of wrongdoing by a candidate we abhor, the same amount of proof should persuade us of wrongdoing by a candidate we adore.

FACULTY OF REASON

One is reminded here of New York Times columnist William Saire’s 1994 defense of President Bill Clinton against Paula Jones’s charges - Clinton and Saire, as you may recall, being sharp political enemies. “I mistrust sudden memories and late hits and lucrative victimhood,” Saire wrote. He argued that although “sexual harassment is widespread, wrong, unlawful and should be stopped,” the best way to do so would be to discourage complaints years after the fact as a way of encouragin­g victims to ile charges promptly. Maybe that’s right, maybe it’s wrong. But at least Saire, to his credit, applied the same standard to those he supported and those he opposed.

There’s nothing wrong with each of us having a per se rule. We can decide, with Saire, to always be skeptical. We can decide, by contrast, to follow what Catherine Mackinnon once described as the methodolog­ical secret of feminism: to believe the stories women tell. What’s important is to be principled, by which I mean in this case being consistent. Certainly we should never decide which charges to believe or disbelieve depending on where our partisan interests lie. (Although, sadly, we do.)

In all of this, we as citizens should apply our faculty of reason. We should not sputter “presumptio­n of innocence” when what we mean is “burden of proof.” And we should not treat the casting of a vote at election time the same as the casting of a vote on a jury.

Still, there is an aspect of the presumptio­n of innocence that I think in conscience our political discourse ought to retain. In the British practice of the 19th century, if Carter was on trial for an utterance supposed to be treasonous, and if the utterance was susceptibl­e of more than one interpreta­tion, the court was supposed to choose the interpreta­tion that made the utterance not treasonous. The presumptio­n of innocence was literal: It referred to the innocence of the remark.

That’s a good rule for politics. If the charge against the candidate is not something that he allegedly did but something that he admittedly said, let’s give him the beneit of the doubt. If there’s a way to understand his words that makes him not a monster, let’s choose that one. On the other hand, if his remarks admit of only one constructi­on, and it’s a bad one, then he’s stuck.

All of which brings us back to Judge Moore. He’s not in trouble because of something terrible he’s supposed to have said. He’s in trouble because of something terrible he’s supposed to have done. Of course it’s possible that he’s done nothing at all. But the court of public opinion has its own rules. The job of voters is to set partisansh­ip aside and exercise their reason, in order to decide whether the accusation­s of misconduct are too plausible to ignore. If they are, that plausibili­ty alone is enough to guide the decision. At election time, the presumptio­n of innocence can’t rescue the guilty.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Republican candidate for US Senate Judge Roy Moore speaks during a campaign event at the Walker Springs Road Baptist Church on Tuesday in Jackson, Alabama.
Agence France-presse Republican candidate for US Senate Judge Roy Moore speaks during a campaign event at the Walker Springs Road Baptist Church on Tuesday in Jackson, Alabama.

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