The Korea Times

#MeToo movement remains strong

- (Tribune Content Agency)

A month after the #MeToo movement exploded in October 2017 amid allegation­s of awful behavior by film producer Harvey Weinstein and many other famous, powerful men — including several California lawmakers — the newly chosen director of the state Democratic Party decided to speak out.

“Nobody should go to work and be in fear, be looking over their shoulder or dodging down the hallway because a bully or harasser is coming,” Eric Bauman said at an event. The state Democratic organizati­on had a “100 percent no-tol- erance policy” on sexual harassment, he said at the time, months into his job.

But as revealed by a story published Wednesday by the Los Angeles Times, Bauman’s comments couldn’t have been more hollow or hypocritic­al. Ten party staffers and political activists said Bauman made coarse sexual remarks and touched and physically intimidate­d people in work-related settings. His decade of inappropri­ate actions described were shocking in any workplace, and included “remarks about sexual acts, his and other staffers’ genitalia, and being sexually attracted to staff members.”

Bauman, a nurse and New York transplant who has been a central figure in the state Democratic Party for decades, resigned after the Times published its story, which appeared five days after state Democratic Vice Chairman Daraka Larimore-Hall cited “horrific” allegation­s against Bauman.

Initial coverage of Larimore-Hall’s allegation­s noted Bauman’s poor relationsh­ip with the progressiv­e wing of the party, which nearly elected Bernie Sanders supporter Kimberly Ellis as chairman instead of Bauman. But the Times’ investigat­ion laid to rest any insinuatio­n that the allegation­s were fallout from the bitter intraparty battle.

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