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The Sleaziness of Donald Trump
by The Editorial Board Oct. 7, 2016
And so we have now heard the
Republican nominee for president of the United States bragging about repeated
sexual assault.
Donald Trump — a man who
aspires to represent the highest ideals of the nation to his fellow citizens
and the world — is heard on a videotape obtained by The Washington Post talking
about how he would force himself on women. He could even grab them between
their legs, he boasted.
“And when you’re a star they
let you do it,” he said.
In a statement released after
the video became public on Friday, Mr. Trump tried to minimize the conversation
as “locker room banter.” As if the problem were just his words rather than his
actions.
“I apologize,” he added, “if
anyone was offended.”
If? Well, maybe it’s
reasonable for him to wonder. This is a man who has said many outrageous
things, after all, proudly violating all conventions of civic discourse with
gutter attacks on women and the disabled, immigrants and minorities. He said
that Senator John McCain was not a war hero and that fat women were disgusting.
Yet, those kinds of remarks
have not deterred the millions of Americans who fervently support him. And the
Republican establishment has remained staunchly in his corner. So it is perhaps
quite understandable that Mr. Trump might wonder whether anyone might be so
sensitive as to actually be offended.
But has he gone too far, at
last?
Gov. Mike Pence, you are
proud to be a Christian conservative. Is this a man you would want at your
dinner table, let alone in the Oval Office?
Speaker Paul Ryan, you
couldn’t possibly want Donald Trump as a role model for your children. Why do
you diminish yourself by urging him on the country?
Senator Kelly Ayotte, you
said this week in your race for re-election from New Hampshire that Mr. Trump
was a role model for children. Then you said you’d misspoken but you still
planned to vote for him, even though you weren’t actually endorsing him. Will
you continue to tie yourself in knots like this?
The tape was made “many years
ago,” Mr. Trump noted in his statement on Friday. It was made in 2005. He was
then 59 years old. It would be hard for anyone to argue that the man he was
then is not the man he is now.
Mr. Trump also noted that
Bill Clinton had “said far worse to me on the golf course.” Who knows if that
is true, and why should anyone care? Mr. Clinton is not running for president,
and, at least until now, Republican politicians have not treated his private
behavior as the standard by which they should be judged.
We elect our presidents in
the hope that they will do their best for us, including to try — whatever their
flaws and ours — to represent the best in us. There is no such hope for Donald
Trump.
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