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Kirsten Gillibrand defends takedown of Al Franken after New Yorker Mag Tries to Rehabilitate him

Kirsten Gillibrand defends takedown of Al Franken after New Yorker Mag Tries to Rehabilitate him

Al Franken: I’m a good guy, not a groper. New Yorker Magazine’s Jane Mayer: Al Franken has been unjustly accused. Just ask him. Kirsten Gillibrand: I’d do the same thing today. The rest of us: Pass the popcorn.

http://www.kabc.com/2017/11/16/leeann-tweeden-on-senator-al-franken/

New Yorker Magazine is nothing if not consistently inconsistent.

In the fall of 2018, writer Jane Mayer and co-writer Ronan Farrow wrote a hit piece for the magazine on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh that was disguised as investigative journalism. The article detailed an allegation of sexual misconduct made by Deborah Ramirez, who was a classmate of Kavanaugh’s at Yale in the early 1980s.

Mayer and Farrow insinuated that the allegation was so serious and credible that “Republican staffers … expressed concern about its potential impact on Kavanaugh’s nomination.” However, just two paragraphs into the piece – when the nature of the allegation was revealed – we also learned that Ramirez had more or less been coaxed into recollecting that it was Brett Kavanaugh who supposedly participated in the alleged incident she said happened 35 years ago when she was drunk:

She was at first hesitant to speak publicly, partly because her memories contained gaps because she had been drinking at the time of the alleged incident. In her initial conversations with The New Yorker, she was reluctant to characterize Kavanaugh’s role in the alleged incident with certainty. After six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney, Ramirez said that she felt confident enough of her recollections to say that she remembers Kavanaugh had exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away.

The story was so thinly sourced and incredible that even mainstream media outlets like the New York Times and ABC News had questions about it.

Nearly a year later, Mayer is at it again. But this time she’s not trying to convict a powerful man in the court of public opinion by way of pushing wild, uncorroborated claims that not even the alleged victim can make with any reasonable degree of certainty. Instead, Mayer is trying to exonerate one – former Senator Al Franken (D-MN), by way of using character witnesses like former staffers, fellow comedians, and even Franken himself to vouch for his good-character.

Heavily sprinkled into the mix is a little slut-shaming against Franken’s first accuser Leeanne Tweeden, a tactic that is apparently is only acceptable when used against conservative women who make #MeToo allegations.

Free Beacon’s Alex Griswold debunks Mayer’s arguments pretty convincingly here:

I’ve spent the bulk of this rebuttal focusing on Mayer’s attacks on Tweeden, because that’s how she spent the bulk of her piece. She devotes 57 paragraphs or so writing about Tweeden’s accusation and how—this is the real thrust of her argument—Tweeden is a Trump supporter working for a Trump-supporting radio network, and how they rolled out her story in an intentionally partisan attack. She devotes only ten paragraphs to the dagger in the heart of her thesis; namely that seven other women accused Franken of inappropriate behavior and forced kissing.

Mayer’s excuses for dismissing their stories are to quote Franken supporters making arguments that are far too embarrassing for her to make herself. Sure, two women claimed Franken grabbed them by the buttocks during a photoshoot, but “he’s sort of clumsy,” he’s a “hugger,” and “there’s a difference between molesting someone and being friendly.” Yeah, women say he tried to kiss them without permission and with an open mouth, but “it was the New York hello-goodbye kiss,” and he’s “a social—not a sexual—’lip-kisser.'” (???) And even if it did all happen as these women claim, “This isn’t Kavanaugh. It isn’t Roy Moore.”

She notes one of Franken’s accusers went to the Boston Globe “a week or two before Tweeden stepped forward” with a story about an unwanted kiss, but they thought it was too thinly-sourced to run. No doubt Mayer meant to weaken the case against Franken, but she accidentally included a damning tidbit; while Tweeden was preparing to accuse Franken of kissing her without her consent, a second women was trying to tell reporters the same story, on the other side of country, and independently. That should be damning, but Mayer completely ignores its significance.

Because Franken is quoted extensively in the New Yorker piece and indicated he more or less felt betrayed by how his Senate colleagues turned on him, the spotlight on Monday also turned to 2020 candidate Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (NY), who was the first Senator to go public with a call for Franken to resign.

Gillibrand has long alleged that her calling on him to step down created fundraising issues for her from big-time Democratic donors. While discussing the issue yesterday, the struggling presidential candidate continued to play victim on the issue, and also threw in the woman card for good measure:

Asked after Monday’s event if she’s been hurt in the presidential race in a way that other senators seeking the White House haven’t, Gillibrand noted that others called for Franken’s resignation but “you wouldn’t know that today, given that I seemed to stand alone.”

[…]

Gillibrand also noted that, while Franken was still in the Senate after the allegations surfaced, female senators were asked “every day, multiple times a day” about his resignation.

“Were the male senators asked? Absolutely not. So let’s be clear, there is absolutely a double standard,” she said.

“Women are asked to hold accountable their colleagues. The men are not,” Gillibrand added. “Who is being held accountable for Al Franken’s decision to resign? Women senators, including me. It’s outrageous. It’s absurd.”

She said doing so hurts Democrats’ chances of denying President Donald Trump a second term, saying, “If this party thinks that, by not valuing women, they’re going to beat Trump, well, they’re wrong.”

Predictably, Gillibrand tries to have it both ways on the #MeToo issue. She’s been a vocal proponent of women’s voices being front and center, recognized and heard first and foremost before all others, yet because female Senators (and not male Senators) were asked multiple times about Franken’s resignation, that’s evidence of some type of double standard? I don’t think so.

At the time of the allegations against Franken, the #MeToo movement was exploding, women were coming forward daily will allegations against prominent public figures including business leaders, celebrities, journalists, and politicians. Many of the accused either went into hiding, lawyered up, or resigned from their positions in disgrace.

Naturally, male Democratic Senators were looking to the female Senators to gauge their opinions on how serious they believed the allegations were against Franken to see if they warranted what would be a serious call for a fellow Democratic member to step down.

Had Gillibrand not been asked about it, she’d have complained later about how the Senate “boys club” left the women out of the debate. She’s trying to have it both ways here, but it doesn’t work that way.

The New Yorker piece, as unconvincing as it is, comes at a time when Democrats would rather give all their focus and fire to President Trump’s alleged “racism” for his attacks on The Squad. The last thing Democrats want to have to deal with is being reminded that the main reason they sacrificed Franken on the #MeToo altar was not because they “believed all women”, but because they were more concerned about the politics and optics, as Professor Jacobson explained at the time.

That there are former and current Democratic Senators going on record now as saying they wish they’d have handled the Franken situation differently and given him the Senate equivalent of due process (a hearing) only complicates matters. Because back then, the standard was that everyone should “believe all women” without question.

Some Democrats still hold to that standard, as Gillibrand made clear with her statement to Mayer on the Franken issue:

“But the women who came forward felt it was sexual harassment,” she said. “So it was.”

However, that view is being challenged by several Democrats who now say accusers do need to be questioned. They’re seemingly embracing due process not out of any real guiding Constitutional principle, but because in retrospect, those same Senators believe the party did a disservice to one of their own.

The next round of Democratic debates are a little over a week away. It will be interesting to see if the New Yorker’s Franken piece is brought up and, if so, how debate participants – in particular, Gillibrand and handsy Joe Biden – respond on a national stage.

— Stacey Matthews has also written under the pseudonym “Sister Toldjah” and can be reached via Twitter. —

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Comments

It was reported at the time that Al Franken have a picture taken of Leeanne Tweeden to retaliate against her for her failure to accept his advances. Further, but he displayed and used the picture to make her the butt of crude jokes.

That is harassment.

This was not an instance of a good guy making a dumb joke that spun out of control due to the actions of others.

    Valerie in reply to Valerie. | July 23, 2019 at 1:30 pm

    I would like a more stable page and an edit button.

      Tom Servo in reply to Valerie. | July 23, 2019 at 1:31 pm

      And a pony, you forgot to ask for a pony.

      BobM in reply to Valerie. | July 24, 2019 at 2:18 pm

      Who you going to believe, Franklin, or your lying eyes (ie the photograph Franklin had taken as a trophy)?

      Also, are you experiencing page reboots during comment typing as well?
      If it’s not just me, there’s something wrong with the LI web code…

    maxmillion in reply to Valerie. | July 23, 2019 at 3:28 pm

    Given the way he initially won, and given the bare-knuckles nature of his progressive politics, Franken deserved whatever he got. And yes the photo is sexist.

It’s always kind of fun to watch groups rediscover the reasons for Due Process after they’ve thrown all of it out the window for a chance to get at their enemies. But the tables always turn.

It was also during the Alabama Campaign where Roy Moore was accused of some 30 year old interaction with a minor just before the election and there was then a parade of accusers (like the yearbook) that fell apart just like with Kavanaugh.

Fox News (Tucker and Hannity) were saying “Franken deserved due process”. Except that was a problem because of Moore’s situation – Due Process would ruin things, and there was no creepy picture like on the head of this post. The “Serious Allegation” standard took out Moore, but also Franken.

At least neither, to my knowledge flew on the Lolita Express to pedophle island with Epstine, unlike some others.

Al Franken was the sacrifice so they could claim they were ‘equally’ applying their demands to step down over ridiculous accusations.

Don’t get me wrong. Franken is a scumbag that blatantly cheated his way into office.

But come on, that picture is nothing more than a tasteless joke by a bad comedian, and all the other accusations were for vague misbehavior.

Now that their #MeToo bullshit has been seen for the political weapon it always was and they didn’t succeed in taking out any prominent Republican, Democrats are having regrets about sacrificing Franken.

    tom_swift in reply to Olinser. | July 23, 2019 at 6:55 pm

    that picture is nothing more than a tasteless joke by a bad comedian

    That picture is the only actual evidence for any of the #MeToo accusations. Everything else is in the realm of “he said/she said” or “he said/she said after some memory coaching” and so carries little weight.

NPR morning edition interviewed Jane Mayer this morning. Mayer made it perfectly clear that applications for rehabilitation – and acceptance of said applications – are wholly predicated on ideology.

Franklin checked all the right boxes, submitted his form to the proper authorities and boom.

The election of obama as a senator was a bad joke, and was a one-off. After the election of franken to the senate, all was lost, and hence the Goon Squad.

    Franken election — recounts till we get the numbers we want, then declare victory and a freeze to the process. (Psst – get rid of all those other ballots – we don’t need them anymore. ~Al)

New Yorker Magazine is nothing if not consistently inconsistent

Pro-Choice

New Yorker Magazine: the rag for limo libs and wanna-be limo libs.

The “Al Franken Decade” ended a long time ago

The ‘franken rehab’ thing is enterained at all, because the GOP has its balls waxed regularly by the swamp/left/islamic axis. Which, let’s face it, they are part of.

The GOP is d.e.a.d. Forget it. Trump is ‘the’ party.

I could be that , darn it, Al, you’re not good enough and people don’t like you at all. D.Bag.