Los Angeles Times

Another Trump sex scandal? Cue collective shrug

- By Michael Finnegan and Mark Z. Barabak michael.finnegan@latimes.com mark.barabak@latimes.com

Most politician­s would have been swallowed up in scandal after new details emerged Friday of an alleged affair — with a Playboy Playmate, no less — that occurred the same weekend of a reported dalliance with a porn star. Not Donald Trump. In eight pages of handwritte­n notes published by the New Yorker, 1998 Playmate of the Year Karen McDougal recalled having sex with Trump in 2006, a few months after his wife, Melania, gave birth to their son, Barron.

McDougal said one of their sexual encounters took place at the same Lake Tahoe golf tournament where porn actress Stephanie Clifford, known as Stormy Daniels, says that she had a tryst with Trump.

The president denies both affairs, but both women received money to keep the matters quiet.

Americans have known for years about Trump’s history of adultery, most famously his 1989 cheating on his first wife, Ivana, with his soon-to-be second wife, Marla Maples.

He won the presidency despite accusation­s of sexual harassment or assault by more than a dozen women, along with an “Access Hollywood” audiotape of Trump boasting that his star power allowed him to grab women by their genitals.

“If you assume someone is a devoutly religious, family-values person, something like this will absolutely destroy their reputation and level their career,” said Lara M. Brown of the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University. “If, on the other hand, you believe this is who they are going in, which, if you heard the ‘Access Hollywood’ tape or listened to interviews with Howard Stern, then this is more confirmati­on of your belief and your expectatio­ns.”

Also, Trump’s checkered business career — bankruptci­es and alleged real estate swindles, for example — inoculates him from some of the harm a more convention­al politician might suffer as details emerge on hush money received by McDougal ($150,000) and Clifford ($130,000).

“His business reputation is not necessaril­y one of high character,” said Brown, an expert on political scandals.

Still, Trump is weathering a rough patch in his presidency, and the McDougal distractio­n is no help.

The White House’s apparent overlookin­g of domestic abuse allegation­s against ousted aide Rob Porter could worsen Republican­s’ troubled standing among women at a time when the #MeToo movement threatens to fuel GOP setbacks in November’s midterm election.

McDougal, who confirmed the authentici­ty of her notes in an interview with New Yorker writer Ronan Farrow, said she was speaking out in part because of the #MeToo movement.

“Every girl who speaks is paving the way for another,” she told the magazine.

The New Yorker article, citing previously undisclose­d texts, emails and legal records, elaborates on a Wall Street Journal report in 2016 about a deal requiring McDougal to keep quiet about the alleged affair.

It included the $150,000 payment to McDougal from American Media Inc., publisher of the National Enquirer, which never printed her story about Trump. David Pecker, chairman and CEO of AMI, is a close friend of the president. In the tabloid world, suppressin­g a story as a favor to a friend or gossip source is known as “catch and kill.”

The National Enquirer published harshly critical articles on Hillary Clinton during the presidenti­al campaign, but AMI denies paying anyone to protect Trump from damaging stories.

McDougal’s comments appeared to buttress the accounts of two other women who said Trump pursued them for sex in the early years of his marriage to Melania Trump. Both cases have sparked legal action against the president.

Trump lawyer Michael Cohen told the New York Times that he used “personal funds to facilitate a payment of $130,000” to Clifford just before the 2016 election. In return, Clifford reportedly agreed to keep quiet about the alleged affair. The watchdog group Common Cause has filed a Federal Election Commission complaint saying the payment was an illegal campaign contributi­on, which Cohen denies.

Like Clifford, McDougal says she had sex with Trump at a golf tournament in Lake Tahoe in July 2006.

The other woman, Summer Zervos, a former contestant on “The Apprentice,” has accused Trump of trying to force himself on her in 2006. She filed a defamation suit against him after he called her a liar.

All three women say their interactio­ns with Trump included encounters in a bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel. All three also say they were escorted to the bungalow by Keith Schiller, a longtime Trump bodyguard who left his job in September as the director of Oval Office operations and deputy assistant to the president.

 ?? D. Kambouris Getty Images ?? FORMER PLAYBOY Playmate Karen McDougal describes a sexual encounter with Trump.
D. Kambouris Getty Images FORMER PLAYBOY Playmate Karen McDougal describes a sexual encounter with Trump.

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