USA TODAY International Edition

Our view: Amid national reckoning, how to go forward

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Tolerance of sexual misconduct by powerful men in America has shifted with stunning swiftness, a change as healthy as it is long past due. The dizzying reversal leaves Americans wondering who might be next to fall — and why this is happening now.

After all, Donald Trump was elected president a little over a year ago despite being caught on tape boasting about groping women and being accused by 13 women of inappropri­ate touching.

And former president Bill Clinton became an elder statesman of the Democratic Party despite multiple allegation­s of sexual misconduct, including Juanita Broaddrick's charge that he raped her in 1978.

A national reckoning on sexual harassment seemed a long way off.

Yet a backlash was building. Something in the graphic, detailed allegation­s by multiple women against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein — followed closely by evidence of misbehavio­r by other celebritie­s, politician­s and media figures — shifted the terrain dramatical­ly.

A combinatio­n of authoritat­ive news reporting and brave, mad-as-hell female victims finally broke the logjam, and society echoed back that enough was enough.

“I have been slut-shamed. I have been harassed. I have been maligned. And you know what? I’m just like you. Because what happened to me behind the scenes happens to all of us in this society,” Weinstein accuser and actress Rose McGowan told a convention of women last month. “And that cannot stand, and it will not stand.”

The casualties have been non-stop. Last Wednesday alone, they included public radio’s Garrison Keillor and Matt Lauer, the longtime Today co-host. On Tuesday, the longest serving member of this Congress, Rep. John Conyers, DMich., “retired” while facing multiple allegation­s of workplace sexual misconduct.

Victims are emboldened and, at last, being heard. Consequenc­es are coming at lightning speed. Powerful men are soul-searching past conduct. And all of this holds out the promise of a more level workplace for men and women.

Even so, human interactio­ns are complicate­d, and a national reckoning mustn’t devolve into sexual McCarthyis­m. What are the guideposts going forward? Here are a few suggestion­s:

❚ The punishment should fit the crime. All sexual misconduct is unacceptab­le, but not all of it is equal.

❚ Allegation­s should be able to withstand thorough examinatio­n and interrogat­ion. Anything less would be condescend­ing, especially to women. The accused deserve due process.

❚ This cultural sea change must trickle down to places such as restaurant­s, farms and small businesses, where sexual harassment can be endemic and allegation­s don't make front-page news.

❚ When the ballot box serves as judge and jury of sexual misconduct, real change will never come as long as voters place political tribalism over basic decency.

After all, sexual abuse isn’t conservati­ve or liberal, Democratic or Republican. It’s just wrong.

 ?? MARK RALSTON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Demonstrat­ion in Hollywood, Calif., on Nov. 12.
MARK RALSTON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Demonstrat­ion in Hollywood, Calif., on Nov. 12.

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