Los Angeles Times

Accusation­s test voters in Alabama

Accusation­s against Roy Moore could give a Democrat a shot at Alabama Senate seat.

- By Lisa Mascaro and Michael Finnegan lisa.mascaro@latimes.com michael.finnegan@latimes.com Times staff writers Mascaro and Finnegan reported from Birmingham and Los Angeles, respective­ly.

Allegation­s of sexual misconduct against Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore could give unexpected momentum to Democratic underdog Doug Jones. Pressure is building on Moore to drop out.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Pressure mounted Friday on U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore of Alabama to drop out of the race amid growing Republican angst over potential damage to the party after a woman accused him of molesting her when she was 14.

GOP senators began pulling their endorsemen­ts of Moore as it became more apparent that his Democratic rival, Doug Jones, could now win a Senate seat in one of America’s most reliably Republican states.

Moore appeared to weaken his standing in a radio interview when he did not deny dating teenage girls when he was in his 30s.

In Alabama, voters were torn between loyalty to the widely admired religiousr­ight firebrand and unease over the new molestatio­n allegation­s that undercut Moore’s conservati­ve image.

The turmoil made for awkward lunch-hour conversati­on. At Niki’s West, a popular Southern-style buffet joint in downtown Birmingham, potential voters said the last thing anyone wanted to talk about on this crisp fall day was “all that sex stuff,” as one man put it, referring to allegation­s in the Washington Post that Moore had a sexual encounter with the 14-year-old girl when he was 32.

But another diner, Gil Franks, a state prison worker, conceded that the report had him rethinking whether he could vote Republican, as he usually does, in the Dec. 12 special election pitting Moore against Democrat Doug Jones.

“I think we need some morality and ethics in politics,” Franks said.

GOP leaders fear that Moore — whose open bigotry had already put them on edge — could actually lose, and it’s unclear whether a write-in candidacy for a GOP replacemen­t would be viable.

Loss of the seat is an ominous prospect for Republican­s: The two-seat GOP majority was already so narrow that the party has been struggling to pass laws.

Mitt Romney said Friday that he believed Leigh Corfman, the woman who told the Post that Moore initiated a sexual encounter with her in 1979, when she was 14.

“Innocent until proven guilty is for criminal conviction­s, not elections,” Romney said on Twitter, calling Corfman’s account “too serious to ignore.”

Moore, who denies ever meeting Corfman, remained defiant Friday, but his latest comments on the matter might have weakened his standing within the party.

In a radio interview Friday with Sean Hannity, Moore did not deny dating teenagers when he was in his early 30s, but said, “I don’t remember dating any girl without the permission of her mother.”

The Post reported that in addition to Corfman, Moore pursued three other women between 16 and 18 years old when he was in his 30s.

Moore admitted he knew two of the women quoted in the Post, but denied any inappropri­ate contact. He described one of them as a “good girl.”

“I don’t remember specific dates,” he said.

“After my return from the military,” he added, “I dated a lot of young ladies.”

After the radio interview, Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Steve Daines of Montana yanked their endorsemen­ts of Moore. Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell and most other top Republican­s agreed that Moore should step aside, but only if there were convincing evidence that the accusation­s were true.

Moore’s strongest supporters, conservati­ves and Christians who powered his primary victory against the GOP’s establishm­ent candidate, Sen. Luther Strange, are standing by him.

The former chief judge of the Alabama Supreme Court, Moore holds folkhero-like stature in the state for defying the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage and, earlier, ignoring another court order to take down a Ten Commandmen­ts monument at a courthouse. One refusal cost him his job, and though voters reelected him, he was later forced to step aside.

Before the molestatio­n charge emerged, Jones, Moore’s Democratic rival, was widely seen as a long shot for the Senate seat vacated by Jeff Sessions, now the U.S. attorney general.

Jones is the prosecutor who won conviction­s — decades later — against Ku Klux Klan members who killed four girls in the bombing of Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church in 1963 as the civil rights movement was gaining force.

But Democrats have not won a Senate seat here for more than 20 years. Jones’ path to victory hinged not just on turning out Democrats, but on peeling away Republican­s. He needs to attract moderate and business-minded Republican­s who view Moore’s cultural appeals to the right wing as too extreme. Stephen K. Bannon, a former chief strategist to President Trump, is one of Moore’s top sponsors.

Ed Rogers, a Washington lobbyist from Alabama who was a White House aide under Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush, said Jones was “not a frightenin­g figure” and now appeared to hold an edge over Moore.

“It could happen: Alabama could elect a Democrat to the Senate,” Rogers said.

At Niki’s West, Nathan Pennington, who said he’s a Republican but “a Christian first,” had just finished lunch with his father. He said he wanted to learn more about Jones before making up his mind.

Franks, the prison worker, was hoping a third candidate might emerge.

“We got to get back to people doing the right thing,” he said.

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? ROY MOORE doesn’t deny dating teens in his 30s, but rejects reports of a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old.
Scott Olson Getty Images ROY MOORE doesn’t deny dating teens in his 30s, but rejects reports of a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old.

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