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    Friday, April 26, 2024

    Serious accusation against Trump should not be ignored

    This editorial appeared in The Washington Post.

    President Donald Trump, following the latest of more than a dozen allegations of sexual assault against him, did not say that he would never touch a woman without her consent. He said, instead, "She's not my type."

    The crudeness and cruelty of this response to a woman's recounting of trauma are not surprising. Trump has said similar things before. But neither the president's callousness nor advice columnist E. Jean Carroll's accusation in New York magazine that he attacked her in a Bergdorf Goodman's dressing room 23 years ago can be met with a shrug.

    Carroll says Trump, in the fall of 1995 or spring of 1996, asked for help buying lingerie for "a girl." Then, in the dressing room, she says he pushed her against the wall and pulled down her tights and assaulted her. Carroll did not report the incident to the police, but she did tell two close friends at the time, both of whom have corroborated her account.

    Trump claims that Carroll is "totally lying." As a matter of principle, everyone deserves a presumption of innocence. But in Trump's case, that must be tempered by what we know. We know that Trump routinely traffics in falsehoods. And we know that Trump has boasted about assaulting women — grabbing them, as he said during a 2005 conversation on an "Access Hollywood" bus, "by the p---y."

    In this context, Carroll's allegation is consistent, credible and horrifying. She writes in her essay, "He opens the overcoat, unzips his pants, and, forcing his fingers around my private area, thrusts his penis halfway — or completely, I'm not certain — inside me."

    Recall Trump's words: "And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything."

    Just as we cannot ignore the disdain for the truth and the law that defines this administration simply because we have grown to expect it, we cannot ignore an allegation of sexual assault against the president simply because others have come before it. Greeting the grossest abuses as routine veers too close to treating them as acceptable. At the least, the country must do for Carroll what the president will not: listen to her.

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