So, about those crimes; maybe we could start here?It is, IMO, the most insane thing that half-wits like @JamesComer are all frothy about the possibility that Hunter Biden will be CHARGED with tax crimes when Trump Org has already been convicted.
— emptywheel (@emptywheel) May 9, 2023
And then move on...Congratulations to Chris Licht whose shrewd scheduling will tie @cnn’s brand to Trump’s sexual assault.
— emptywheel (@emptywheel) May 9, 2023
Yeah, we can enjoy that later.NYT has decided to both sides a jury verdict. I guess the alternative is to admit they fostered the career of a career sexual predator. https://t.co/JiLGd9EG6e
— emptywheel (@emptywheel) May 9, 2023
And frankly, sometimes the bullshit debunks itself. I mean, it’s not a defense to a sexual assault charge; it’s not a defense to a libel claim; and given the famous photograph everyone associates with this trial, it’s not even vaguely credible. Sometimes journalism is letting the reader understand.Reminder: There's NO REASON to repeat or screen cap Trump's lies w/o debunking them. Doing so is not journalism. pic.twitter.com/NzMFq5KOr5
— emptywheel (@emptywheel) May 9, 2023
In November 2017, 61% of voters – including 56% of men and a nontrivial margin of white men (50-43) and white women (55-37) – said then-President Trump should be impeached and removed from office if he were proven to have engaged in “sexual harassment,” according to a Quinnipiac poll. That overall support – the eye popping number of 61% – was higher than any poll tracking public support for impeachment and removal from office for the scandalous conduct in Trump’s first and second impeachments (see Five Thirty-Eight’s complete collection of surveys for the first and second impeachment). What’s more, Quinnipiac asked only about sexual harassment not sexual assault in the case of Trump. The latter, which is also the core crime in the E. Jean Carroll verdict, would have presumably produced even greater levels of support for removal from office.
The Quinnipiac poll was not alone.
A December 2017 Public Policy Polling survey found 53% of voters thought Trump should resign because of the “allegations” of sexual harassment against him, and another Quinnipiac poll in December 2017 found that 50% of voters already thought Trump should resign because he had “been accused of sexual harassment and sexual assault by multiple women.” (See appendix below for the exact wording and results of each of these surveys.)
These results are no surprise when taken in context of recent social science studies. Rigorous empirical research shows that Americans generally consider sexual assault incompatible with serving in elected office or positions of public trust (see e.g., Savani and Collignon, 2023; Stark and Collignon, 2022; Masuoka, Grose and Junn, 2021; Craig and Cossette, 2020). A 2020 study in the journal Political Behavior found that “(1) a significant electoral penalty is likely to be assessed against politicians accused of sexual harassment; (2) the size of that penalty (in terms of lost votes and lower favorability) … is concentrated among co-partisans and, to a lesser extent, Independents.” That study, like many others, concerned “accusations” and “allegations” of misbehavior; the results are likely to be even more pronounced in the event of allegations being proven – especially in a court and especially by a unanimous verdict.
And somebody on FoxNews basically agrees:
Again, the photograph. And while Fox will find a spin for this tonight. But there’s another civil case going to trial in October, and three more criminal cases likely to come.This is a brutal 3 minutes for Trump on Fox News https://t.co/2PfgBfSijm
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) May 9, 2023
See how easily it spins away?Tacopina: Part of me was obviously very happy that Donald Trump was not branded a rapist, I didn't think there should be any liability findings pic.twitter.com/lMvZ2zppYf
— Acyn (@Acyn) May 9, 2023
Trust Dick Morris to find the way. OUTREACH! What a concept!*Some big brain analysis here https://t.co/NAtEX1lBor
— MeidasTouch (@MeidasTouch) May 9, 2023
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