Santa Cruz Sentinel

Believe women? Sure, say Democrats, but vet their claims

- By Laurie Kellman and Bill Barrow

WASHINGTON >> “Believe women” was never a call to believe all women automatica­lly.

That’s what leading Democrats, including the prominent figures of the #MeToo movement, are suggesting as they stand behind former Vice President Joe Biden and his bid to unseat President Donald Trump. From House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to the female senators who ran for president and prominent Hollywood activists, they’re not backing down after Biden on Friday publicly denied a former aide’s accusation that he assaulted her in 1993.

“It never happened,” Biden said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “Believing women means taking the woman’s claim seriously when she steps forward, and then vet it, look into it. That’s true in this case as well. ... But in the end, the truth is what matters, and in this case, the truth is the claims are false.”

It was largely the denial Democrats were hoping for.

Even so, there was a clear discomfort and perhaps resentment with being on defense on the issue while campaignin­g against a president accused by more than two dozen women of sexual misconduct. (Trump has denied the allegation­s.) Especially galling to some is the charge by Republican­s that Democrats are giving Biden a pass they didn’t afford Justice Brett Kavanaugh when he denied Christine Blasey Ford’s accusation of sexual assault when they were teenagers.

Pelosi, the nation’s highest-ranking Democrat, recognized the maw and curtly stepped around it.

“I don’t need a lecture or a speech,” she said at her weekly news conference as she cut into a reporter’s question about a double standard. “With all the respect in the world for any woman who comes forward, I have the highest regard for Joe Biden. And that’s what I have to say about that.”

Others have been less succinct. Actress and leading #MeToo activist Alyssa Milano sat behind Kavanaugh during his televised confirmati­on hearings, a position she sought as a way to stand in “solidarity” with Blasey Ford.

But as the Reade allegation­s swirled around Biden and a party finally uniting around him, Milano penned an essay for Deadline.com in which she acknowledg­ed “shades of gray” and reiterated her support for the former vice president.

“Believing women was never about ‘ Believe all women no matter what they say,’ it was about changing the culture of NOT believing women by default,” Milano wrote.

Karen Finney, a prominent Democratic strategist and message-maker who worked for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, rejected the Kavanaugh comparison outright.

In the context of sexual assault allegation­s, Finney said “believe women” doesn’t mean accepting as fact any assertion, but instead means affording women the default credibilit­y to take claims seriously.

“If you start from the premise that this person is telling the truth, then you do the investigat­ion and look at the facts,” she said, “and if the facts tell a different story, then that’s an important conversati­on to have.”

Biden’s supporters in the Senate, too, have stood by him, including some who challenged him for the nomination and are now said to be on his short list for a running mate.

But a few hours after his appearance on MSNBC, Trump’s campaign posted a video featuring many of them — Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Kamala Harris of California and Mazie Hirono of Hawaii — saying in the past that female accusers should be believed.

The reel begins and ends with Biden and Clinton, the 2016 Democratic nominee whose husband, Bill Clinton, was impeached in connection with his extramarit­al affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. The Senate acquitted him, but the episode remains one of the party’s fraught chapters in its advocacy for women.

Biden appeared Friday to recognize the need to reinforce his commitment.

During an evening virtual fundraiser with hundreds of veterans from the Obama administra­tion, he addressed the matter again, repeating his assertions that Reade’s account “didn’t happen,” but explaining that his reaction doesn’t amount to hypocrisy because of how Democrats have approached the #MeToo movement.

“My knowledge that it isn’t true does nothing to shake my belief that women have to be able to be heard and that all the claims be taken seriously,” Biden said. “It isn’t enough just to simply take my word for it and dismiss it out of hand. Frankly, that shouldn’t be enough for anyone because we know that sort of approach is how the culture of abuse has been allowed to fester for so long.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign rally at Renaissanc­e High School in Detroit on March 9.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Democratic presidenti­al candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign rally at Renaissanc­e High School in Detroit on March 9.

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