Latest sex accusation against Trump lands with a thud
Nearly a week after the latest sexual misconduct
accusation against President Donald Trump, the story has largely landed with a
thud.
Some see the muted response to author E. Jean
Carroll’s allegation of Trump assaulting her in a department store dressing
room more than two decades ago as yet another example of the divisive Politics
of Trump: Those who support him dismiss it as fake news. Those against him see
it as confirmation of what they knew all along.
“Essentially, you’re either for him or against him,
and if you’re for him, it doesn’t matter what he’s done,” said Larry Sabato,
who directs the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics. “It really is
remarkable. He simply is exempt from the rules everyone else must obey.”
It’s a cycle that’s been repeated before. After more
than a dozen women came forward during Trump’s 2016 campaign with allegations
of sexual misconduct years earlier, Trump called them “liars” who sought to
harm his campaign with “100-percent fabricated” stories. When the “Access Hollywood”
tape emerged weeks before the election of him bragging about grabbing women by
the genitals, he dismissed it as “locker room talk.”
In the case of Carroll, a feature writer and
longtime Elle advice columnist, her accusation was revealed in an excerpt to an
upcoming book, leading Trump and others to cast her aside as an opportunist.
Her book, “What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal,” describes what she
calls a lifetime of encounters with predatory men, starting with her early
years as an Indiana cheerleader and pageant winner.
She said that Trump, in the mid-1990s, followed her
into a dressing room after a chance encounter at the high-end New York
department store Bergdorf Goodman and proceeded to pull down her tights and
sexually assault her. Trump, in denying the account on Monday, said she’s “not
my type,” a stunning remark from a U.S. president that briefly breathed life
into the story.
But even ranking Democrats such as Sen. Richard
Durbin of Illinois were resigned to how it would all play out. “I wouldn’t
dismiss it,” he told The Washington Post, “but let’s be honest, he’s going to
deny it and little is going to come of it.”
Lawyer Debra Katz, who represented Christine Blasey
Ford in her Senate testimony on her alleged high school assault by then-Supreme
Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, concurred.
“The electorate knew this about him. This is nothing
new about his character or his behavior — at this point there have been, what,
13 credible accusers?” Katz said. “People have become inured to it. And it’s
disgraceful.”
Carroll, who did not return messages left on her
cell phone from The Associated Press this week, stopped short in various
television interviews of calling what happened to her rape and described the
experience as a “three-minute” ordeal that did not change her life. Carroll has
said she doesn’t plan to seek criminal charges and it appears the statute of
limitations has run out.
“I’m a mature woman. I can handle it,” she said on
MSNBC. “My life has gone on. I’m a happy woman.”
It didn’t help that Carroll’s book excerpt dropped
late last Friday and was largely drowned out by events of the week: the refugee
crisis at the border, the U.S. brinkmanship with Iran and the regular onslaught
of news about the environment, the economy and the 2020 election.
“We are trauma-fatigued by the volume of despairing
issues seemingly beyond our personal control,” said Carrie Goldberg, a New York
lawyer who represents victims of sexual assault and revenge porn. “When a
solution feels beyond grasp, it can be impossible to muster an appropriate
emotional reaction.”
Sen. Mazie Hirnono, a Hawaii Democrat, called it a
sad day when a rape accusation against the president leaves the country numb.
“With this president you have the Iran situation
going on, you have North Korea going on, you have the border crisis going on,”
she said. “So after a while you just practically throw up your hands.”