Oroville Mercury-Register

Trump-backed candidates face scrutiny after minimal vetting

- By Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON » One has been accused of assaulting another White House aide. Another allegedly threatened his ex-wife’s life, exaggerate­d claims of financial success and alarmed business associates with his erratic behavior. A third has asked a judge to keep past protection-from-abuse orders sealed.

As former President Donald Trump wades into contested primaries across the country, he’s trying to exact revenge and remake the Republican Party in his image. In doing so, he has endorsed a series of candidates involved in allegation­s of wrongdoing, especially concerning their treatment of women.

GOP anxiety

That’s contributi­ng to anxiety among some Republican­s who worry that Trump is lending his powerful political backing only to those who flatter his ego. Such candidates may be able to win GOP primaries in which the party’s Trumpsuppo­rting base dominates, only to struggle in the general election.

And with control of Congress hinging on just a few seats, such missteps could be costly.

“There is no vetting process — at least not on policy and electabili­ty,” said Dan Eberhart, a GOP donor and Trump supporter who said the concerns extend to many corners of the party. “The endorsemen­t process comes down to how much a candidate supports the former president and is willing to have the Trump machine run their campaign and fundraisin­g . ... Whether they are the most viable candidate in a given race is secondary.”

Abuse allegation­s

The former president has little reason to be blindsided by the allegation­s facing some of the candidates he’s endorsed. Some details would have turned up in basic background checks similar to those required by many employers. Others were said to have been shared with Trump personally or circulated within GOP circles well before he made his endorsemen­ts.

In her new book, “I’ll Take Your Questions Now: What I Saw at the Trump White House,” Stephanie Grisham, the former White House press secretary and chief of staff to first lady Melania Trump, accuses her ex-boyfriend of growing abusive as their relationsh­ip deteriorat­ed. The exboyfrien­d, Max Miller, was a fellow White House aide and is now running for Congress in Ohio with Trump’s enthusiast­ic blessing.

Miller has adamantly denied the charges and on Wednesday filed a defamation suit accusing Grisham of sullying his name.

Grisham says she told the former president and first lady before Miller announced his candidacy about the abuse but wrote in a Washington Post oped that they “didn’t seem to care.” Trump endorsed Miller as an act of revenge against Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, one of 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach him over the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

“A White House staffer accused of assault by a woman whom the president knew and trusted? It didn’t even seem to register on the president’s radar screen as a concern. To the contrary, knowing what he knows, Trump has endorsed my ex’s bid for Congress,” she wrote.

Trump has a long history of siding with powerful men accused of hurting women, from his Supreme Court pick Brett Kavanaugh to former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly. He defended a former White House aide who resigned after allegation­s that he was physically and emotionall­y abusive to two ex-wives became public. And in 2017, he backed GOP Senate candidate Roy Moore despite allegation­s that Moore had sexually assaulted teen girls decades ago when he was in his 30s.

Trump himself has been accused of sexual misconduct by more than two dozen women but he, like the other men he has defended, has always vigorously denied the allegation­s.

Drawing a line

Still, the former president and his associates occasional­ly draw the line.

Last week, Trump cut ties with his former campaign manager and longtime adviser Corey Lewandowsk­i after a donor alleged Lewandowsk­i made repeated unwanted sexual advances as a fundraisin­g event. During the 2016 campaign, Trump had defended Lewandowsk­i after he was accused of forcefully grabbing a reporter by the arm and faced a battery charge, which was dropped. Lewandowsk­i denied wrongdoing in both cases.

But more often than not, an allegation of wrongdoing hasn’t stopped the former president from offering his endorsemen­t.

Trump last month threw his support behind football great Herschel Walker, a longtime friend, for an open Senate seat in Georgia, a race the former president had urged Walker to enter. That endorsemen­t came more than a month after an Associated Press review of hundreds of pages of public records tied to Walker’s business ventures and his divorce uncovered accusation­s that Walker repeatedly threatened to kill his ex-wife and her new boyfriend and exaggerate­d his business success, among other things.

Walker’s campaign has generally avoided responding to specifics, but has cited the ex-NFL star’s mental health issues, which he has discussed in detail, including in a book.

And in Pennsylvan­ia, Trump’s chosen candidate for an open Senate seat, Sean Parnell, has faced questions from rival Jeff Bartos over restrainin­g orders sought by his wife in 2017 and 2018 during divorce proceeding­s. The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported Wednesday that he had asked a judge “to ban his wife and her attorney from talking publicly about past protection-from-abuse orders against him.”

 ?? BEN GRAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks as Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker listens during his Save America rally in Perry, Ga., on Saturday.
BEN GRAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump speaks as Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker listens during his Save America rally in Perry, Ga., on Saturday.

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