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| 'MediaBuzz' host Howard Kurtz explains how and why journalists and
reporters in recent stories like the Roy Moore and Harvey Weinstein
sexual harassment scandals get sources to go on the record. |
The media tide is turning against Roy Moore as even
some prominent voices on the right are urging him to drop out of the
U.S. Senate race in Alabama.
The mounting allegations against the
former judge have already undermined his attempts to paint himself as
the victim of runaway reporting by the Washington Post. And whoever set
up a robocall in Alabama from fictional Post scribe named "Bernie
Bernstein," offering money for dirt on Moore, is a moron.
The real Post, meanwhile, reports
on two more accusers describing unwanted overtures by Moore when they
worked at the local mall. One, a high school senior, said Moore pursued
her at Sears, called her while she was in trig class, and eventually got
"a date that ended with Moore driving her to her car in a dark parking
lot behind Sears and giving her what she called an unwanted, 'forceful'
kiss that left her scared."
Alabama Media Group quotes
another woman as saying that in 1991, when Moore was a married
attorney, he grabbed her buttocks when she went there with her mother as
part of a custody case. "He didn’t pinch it; he grabbed it," the woman
said.
Ivanka Trump, meanwhile, told the AP: "There's a
special place in hell for people who prey on children. I've yet to see a
valid explanation and I have no reason to doubt the victims' accounts."
All this is unfolding as there is a pronounced shift on
the right. The Wall Street Journal’s conservative editorial page, no
fan of the Republican establishment, says Moore should drop out:
"Mr. Moore's credibility has fallen below the level of
survivability ... The sensible move would be for Mr. Moore to step away
from the campaign and allow Alabama’s Republicans to put forth a more
credible candidate to run as a write-in against Democrat Doug Jones."
And if he doesn't, and President Trump doesn't try to
force him out, says the Journal, "then the GOP will be better off if Mr.
Moore loses ... Democrats and the media will make Mr. Moore the running
mate of every Republican in 2018."
Sean Hannity, who had withheld judgment on Moore—and
conducted the only interview with him on his radio show—sounds ready to
jump ship.
"For me, the judge has 24 hours," Hannity told Fox
viewers Tuesday night. "He must immediately and fully come up with a
satisfactory explanation for your inconsistency ... You must remove any
doubt. If you can’t do this, then Judge Moore needs to get out of this
race."
Hannity noted that when he asked Moore whether he had dated teenage girls, he said "not generally."
But the tipping point may have been the presser held by
Beverly Young Nelson, who said Moore locked her in a car and sexually
assaulted her when she was 16. For one thing, we saw a woman on
television choking back tears as she recounted what happened. But
perhaps more important, Moore said he had never met Young—and yet he had
signed her yearbook, at a time when he was 30: "To a sweeter more
beautiful girl I could not say Merry Christmas. Christmas 1977. Love,
Roy Moore, D.A."
For Alabama Media Group, publisher of the Birmingham News and two other papers in the state, this is a tipping point.
"Roy Moore simply cannot be a U.S. senator," an
editorial declares. "Even if his party and many of its adherents still
think it possible, it is unthinkable--for his state, and his country.
"Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is a consideration for
the courtroom, not the ballot box. When choosing our representative
before the rest of the world, character matters."
So what does it mean that Moore has lost most of the media, the RNC, and Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan?
No one can force Moore out of the race. He's on the
ballot for the Dec. 12 special election. He owes nothing to Beltway
Republicans who opposed him in the primary in favor of the appointed
senator, Luther Strange. He's still popular in Alabama and the latest
poll has him a few points ahead of Democrat Doug Jones.
But does there come a point where so much of the media
and political universe is aligned against you that it makes no sense to
soldier on? Especially when McConnell is saying the Senate might refuse
to seat him?
At a public appearance the other day, Moore asked: "Why
do you think I'm being harassed from media and by people pushing
forward allegations of the last 28 days of this election?"
The answer is that there are inconsistencies in his
account. And Moore is losing even media figures who ordinarily would be
staunchly behind him.
Howard Kurtz is a Fox News analyst and the host of "MediaBuzz" (Sundays 11 a.m.). He is the author of five books and is based in Washington. Follow him at @HowardKurtz. Click here for more information on Howard Kurtz.