The growing chorus of Democratic lawmakers calling on Sen. Al Franken to step down
Wednesday opened up a dramatic partisan divide in how the two major
parties are responding to their members and candidates accused of sexual
harassment or abuse.
By
the day’s end, 30 lawmakers — and well over half the Democratic Senate
Caucus — had weighed in to say that Franken should resign. The comedian
turned senator from Minnesota announced he’d hold a press conference
Thursday morning and was widely expected to announce he was leaving his
seat.
The
pressure on Franken to step aside has an element of political
calculation, as Democrats seek to create a contrast with support by
President Trump and the Republican National Committee for Alabama’s Roy
Moore, who has refused to give up his bid for the Senate despite
allegations by numerous women that he sexually pursued or even molested
them when they were in their teens. But it’s also because Democratic and
independent voters take seriously sexual harassment accusations while
Republican voters, according to surveys, are more skeptical of their
importance.
A
Quinnipiac survey released Tuesday found a 26-point gap between the
parties on this issue. Asked if an elected official should resign if
accused of sexual harassment or sexual assault by multiple people, 77
percent of registered Democrats but only 51 percent of registered
Republicans (and 60 percent of independents) said yes.
That
gap in part reflects the gender gap in party identification. Women are
more likely to be Democrats, and Quinnipiac found that 74 percent of
women but only 54 percent of men say that elected officials accused by
multiple women should step down.
Eight
women have accused Sen. Al Franken of groping or trying to cadge
unwanted kisses. Multiple women also accused Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich.,
of pressuring them for sexual favors in the workplace and work-related
settings. Conyers, the only member of the House of Representatives whose
tenure dates back to the 1960s, on Tuesday became the first federally
elected official to step down in the recent wave of
allegations. Freshman Rep. Ruben Kihuen of Nevada, a protégé of former
Senate majority leader Harry Reid, also has been accused of harassing his 25-year-old campaign finance director; despite calls from Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi to step aside, he’s indicated he has no plans to resign.Senate
candidate Roy Moore kisses his wife, Kayla Moore, after he speaks at a
campaign rally this week in Fairhope, Ala. (Photo: Brynn Anderson/AP)
“Franken
is entitled to the Senate ethics investigation process,” Sen. Kirsten
Gillibrand told reporters Wednesday, kicking off the day’s cascade of
calls for his resignation from senators, but “it would be better for the
country for him to offer that clear message that he values women, that
we value women, and that this kind of behavior is not acceptable.”
Congress
itself as an institution was, she said, ill-equipped “to do the kind of
accountability the American people are searching for.”
“Public
service demands higher standards — standards we choose to live by the
moment we enter public life,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington
state, the third-ranking Democratic leader in the Senate.
Meanwhile, Moore pressed on with his campaign, this week drawing the robust support of Donald Trump and
the renewed support of the Republican National Committee, which had cut
ties to him after the charges first surfaced. “The president made that
decision and he decided it was better to have somebody support his
agenda than a Democrat that doesn’t,” said White House press secretary
Sarah Sanders on Tuesday, explaining Trump’s reasoning.
A CBS News poll in the state found 71 percent of Republicans believed the
allegations against Moore were false, with most blaming them on
Democrats and the media. Alabama Republican supporters of Moore also
backed Trump, who has himself been accused of unwanted sexual advances
or assault by multiple women, at the rate of 96 percent.
And
in the House, Republican Rep. Blake Farenthold, who reached an $84,000
settlement with former staffer Lauren Greene after she filed a sexual
harassment and discrimination complaint in 2014, shows no signs of going
anywhere. His now 30-year-old accuser, in contrast, has lost her job
and is working $15 an hour temporary gigs and babysitting to meet ends meet.Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., speaks to the media last month on Capitol Hill. (Photo: Alex Brandon/AP)
Congressional
leaders on both sides of the aisle have spoken out on the issue before
today. “I had hoped that Judge Moore would resign, in other words,
withdraw from the race. That obviously is not going to happen. If he
were to be elected, I think he would immediately have an issue with the
Ethics Committee,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Tuesday.
Earlier he had suggested the Senate might not seat Moore, should he win.
In
the House, Speaker Paul Ryan announced mandatory sexual harassment
training for staffers and members in mid-November, “not only to raise
awareness, but also make abundantly clear that harassment in any form
has no place in this institution.” The Senate passed a resolution in
early November mandating the same training for all members, staffers and
interns. Rep. Jackie Speier and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand have introduced legislation seeking to overhaul how harassment complaints are handled.
After
first calling him an “icon,” Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi changed her
mind and called on Conyers to resign. “No matter how great the legacy,
it is no license to harass or discriminate,” she said after he stepped down.
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