WASHINGTON
(AP) — Joe Biden on Friday was expected to give his first public
comments on a sexual assault allegation that has roiled his presidential
campaign.
The
presumptive Democratic nominee will appear on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” to
address the allegation by his former Senate staffer Tara Reade that he
assaulted her in the basement of a Capitol Hill office building in the
1990s. His campaign issued a statement in early April denying the
allegation, and a number of former Biden staffers have defended their
boss in interviews.
Biden
himself has yet to face any questions or weigh in on the accusation,
even as it’s taken on fresh attention this week after two of Reade’s
associates said she previously told them about elements of her
allegations.
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Republicans
worried about President Donald Trump’s increasingly precarious
political standing are seizing on the allegation to portray Democrats as
hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against
conservatives. They are digging in despite the fact that it could renew
attention on the multiple sexual assault allegations lodged against
Trump.
Democrats,
meanwhile, are in an awkward position of vigorously validating women
who come forward with their stories while defending the man who will be
their standard-bearer in what many in the party consider the most
important election of their lifetimes.
Some in the party have been urging Biden to mount a more forceful response to the allegation.
“The
campaign has issued statements, but he hasn’t issued any statements in
his own voice,” said former Democratic National Committee Chairwoman
Donna Brazile. “It’s not helping, it’s just damaging — not only to the
person who has come forward, but it’s also damaging the candidate.”
Lis Smith, a top strategist on Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign, also called on the Biden campaign to speak up.
“These
accusations have not been found to be credible, so it’s in the Biden
campaign’s interest to nip this in the bud directly and do it quickly,”
she said.
The
November contest between Biden and Trump will be the first presidential
race of the #MeToo era, which has led numerous women to come forward
with allegations of sexual assault. Trump has been accused of assault
and unwanted touching by numerous women, allegations he denies.
Women
are a core constituency for Democrats, and Biden has a mixed history.
While he wrote the Violence Against Women Act as a senator, he also came
under heavy criticism for his handling of Anita Hill’s Senate testimony
in the 1990s. Just before he launched his 2020 campaign, several women
accused him of unwanted touching, behavior for which he apologized.
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Biden
has pledged to pick a woman as a running mate, and the allegation has
left those thought to be in contention in a tough spot.
Stacey
Abrams, the former Georgia Democratic governor candidate, said, “I
believe Joe Biden,” citing a New York Times investigation that she said
exonerated him.
“Women deserve to be heard,” she said, “but I also believe that those allegations have to be investigated by credible sources.”
That
echoed talking points issued by the Biden campaign to surrogates last
week that were obtained by The Associated Press. They pointed to
investigations by The New York Times, The Washington Post and the AP
that found no other allegation of sexual assault and no pattern of
sexual misconduct.
On
Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also defended Biden. Speaking on
CNN, she said she was “satisfied with how he has responded,” even as she
acknowledged “it’s a matter that he has to deal with.”
Some
Democratic donors and fundraisers say the issue has not come up in
calls with party financiers. Others worry that it could be used against
Biden, much as Hillary Clinton’s private email server and the activities
of the Clinton Foundation were wielded against her by Trump.
Some, most notably women, say they are paying close attention to the allegations, which gave them pause.
Alex
Sink, a donor and former Democratic nominee for governor of Florida,
said she was “not happy” to read about the allegations against Biden.
While she still plans to vote for him, she worried his campaign was too
quick to categorically deny Reade’s story.
“They
put themselves immediately out on a limb by saying, ‘It didn’t happen,
we categorically deny it, it’s not true,’” Sink said.
Some
female Democratic operatives expressed concerns the allegation is
particularly damaging because it’s an indictment of Biden’s central
campaign rationale: that he provides a moral counter to Trump and that
the election is a “battle for the soul of America.”
“The
stakes could not be higher for defeating Donald Trump — but at the same
time, I think we have to apply a consistent standard for how we treat
allegations of sexual assault, and also be clear-eyed about how Donald
Trump will use these allegations in the general election campaign,” said
Claire Sandberg, who worked as Bernie Sanders’ organizing director.
The
silence from the Biden campaign has given Republicans an opening on an
issue that was, in 2016, more fraught for the GOP, when Trump was asked
to answer for the more than two dozen women who alleged varying levels
of sexual assault and harassment. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
told Fox News on Thursday that Biden will “have to participate in
releasing all the information related to” the allegation, a stance he
didn’t take when Trump faced misconduct accusations.
The
GOP argues Democrats aren’t being consistent, pointing to aggressive
questioning and coverage of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh when
he faced an allegation of sexual assault.
Speaking
about the allegation for the first time on Friday, Trump said Biden
“should respond” before proceeding to criticize the treatment of
Kavanaugh as “an absolute disgrace to our country.”
Steve
Guest, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee, said “the
left, and their media allies, has one standard for Republicans and
another standard for Democrats like Joe Biden.”
“The double standard,” he said, “is appalling.”
___
Associated Press writers Brian Slodysko in Washington and Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.
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