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Friday, March 29, 2024

Donald Trump claims election being rigged amid new sex misconduct allegations

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New allegations of sexual misconduct rocked Donald Trump’s campaign on Friday as the candidate denounced his accusers, blasted news organisations that have reported the claims and said it all shows “the whole election is being rigged”.

The Republican presidential nominee said his advisers have urged him to talk about other issues, but he felt compelled to defend himself against a stream of accusations from women he said he has never met.

“I feel I have to talk about it,” he told a rally at Greensboro, North Carolina, adding, “It’s a phony deal. I have no idea who these women are.”

The latest accuser, a former contestant on Trump’s reality show, The Apprentice, said he made unwanted sexual advances at a Beverly Hills hotel in 2007. Summer Zervos, 41, is among several women who have made similar allegations in the past week.

Kristin Anderson told the Post she was sitting on a couch with friends at a New York nightclub in the early 1990s when someone’s hand reached up her skirt and touched her through her underwear.

Ms Anderson told the newspaper that she pushed the hand away, turned around and recognised Mr Trump as the man who had groped her.

“It’s nonsense,” Mr Trump said. “It’s false.”

He said his accusers are looking for “fast fame” by making unsubstantiated claims.

“These people are sick,” he said.

His running mate, Mike Pence, said earlier on Friday that the Trump campaign will soon produce evidence to support Mr Trump’s denial that he forced himself on women.

“These people are sick,” he said.

His running mate, Mike Pence, said earlier on Friday that the Trump campaign will soon produce evidence to support Mr Trump’s denial that he forced himself on women.

In his Greensboro remarks, Mr Trump took aim at the news media, accusing reporters of conspiring with Democrat Hillary Clinton to defeat his candidacy.

“This whole election is being rigged,” he declared. The accusations of sexual misconduct, he said, are “poisoning the minds of the electorate.”

“It’s one big fix,” he said.

Mrs Clinton and first lady Michelle Obama say Americans are learning more about unacceptable behaviour by Mr Trump every day.

“We can’t expose our children to this any longer, not for another minute, let alone for four years,” the first lady told Clinton supporters at a rally in New Hampshire.

In a passionate address on Thursday, Mrs Obama said that after years of working to end “this kind of violence and abuse and disrespect … we’re hearing these exact same things on the campaign trail. We are drowning in it”.

“There will be more evidence coming out” to prove Mr Trump’s innocence, Mr Pence said.

New allegations of sexual misconduct rocked Donald Trump’s campaign on Friday as the candidate denounced his accusers, blasted news organisations that have reported the claims and said it all shows “the whole election is being rigged”.

The Republican presidential nominee said his advisers have urged him to talk about other issues, but he felt compelled to defend himself against a stream of accusations from women he said he has never met.

“I feel I have to talk about it,” he told a rally at Greensboro, North Carolina, adding, “It’s a phony deal. I have no idea who these women are.”

The latest accuser, a former contestant on Trump’s reality show, The Apprentice, said he made unwanted sexual advances at a Beverly Hills hotel in 2007. Summer Zervos, 41, is among several women who have made similar allegations in the past week.

Ms Zervos was an Apprentice contestant in 2006.

She said she later contacted Mr Trump to inquire about a job with one of his businesses.

She said she had an initial meeting with Mr Trump, and when they parted he kissed her on the lips and asked for her phone number.

Weeks later Mr Trump called to invite her to meet him at a hotel, she said, and during their meeting he became sexually aggressive, kissing her open mouthed and touching her breast.

Earlier Friday, the Washington Post reported the contentions of another woman who says she was sexually assaulted by Mr Trump.

Kristin Anderson told the Post she was sitting on a couch with friends at a New York nightclub in the early 1990s when someone’s hand reached up her skirt and touched her through her underwear.

Ms Anderson told the newspaper that she pushed the hand away, turned around and recognised Mr Trump as the man who had groped her.

“It’s nonsense,” Mr Trump said. “It’s false.”

He said his accusers are looking for “fast fame” by making unsubstantiated claims.

“These people are sick,” he said.

His running mate, Mike Pence, said earlier on Friday that the Trump campaign will soon produce evidence to support Mr Trump’s denial that he forced himself on women.

In his Greensboro remarks, Mr Trump took aim at the news media, accusing reporters of conspiring with Democrat Hillary Clinton to defeat his candidacy.

“This whole election is being rigged,” he declared. The accusations of sexual misconduct, he said, are “poisoning the minds of the electorate.”

“It’s one big fix,” he said.

Mrs Clinton and first lady Michelle Obama say Americans are learning more about unacceptable behaviour by Mr Trump every day.

“We can’t expose our children to this any longer, not for another minute, let alone for four years,” the first lady told Clinton supporters at a rally in New Hampshire.

In a passionate address on Thursday, Mrs Obama said that after years of working to end “this kind of violence and abuse and disrespect … we’re hearing these exact same things on the campaign trail. We are drowning in it”.

In an appearance on Friday on Fox News, Republican vice presidential candidate Mr Pence blamed the news media for what he characterised as an obsession with “unsubstantiated” claims by Mr Trump’s accusers.

“There will be more evidence coming out” to prove Mr Trump’s innocence, Mr Pence said.

Asked what evidence he was talking about, he said, “The campaign is working on bringing that information out.” He did not elaborate.

Mrs Clinton had no rallies planned on Friday, but President Barack Obama campaigned for her in Ohio. The president chided Mr Trump for claiming the election is rigged against him, and he asserted that the Republican poses a risk to the American political system.

“Democracy is on the ballot,” Mr Obama said in Cleveland.

The allegations against Mr Trump and his counter-charges dominated the campaign on Thursday and have distracted attention from the release of thousands of hacked emails from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta that include some potentially damaging information.

A batch of emails released on Thursday by WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy group, indicated that Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign had tried to move the Illinois Democratic primary to a later date, believing it might help her.

On Friday WikiLeaks released a fresh pile of emails from Mr Podesta’s private account.

Mr Trump asserts that the news media is soft-pedalling the WikiLeaks emails at his expense. Five women have told publications detailed stories about encounters with Mr Trump that ended with groping, kissing and other unwanted sexual advances.

Mr Trump’s struggling candidacy is clearly having an impact on the Republican Party’s ability to raise money. The Republican National Committee has raised about 25% less over the past three months than it did over the same period four years ago, when Mitt Romney was leading the ticket.

The RNC said on Friday that it raised 39.4 million dollars last month, compared to 48.4 million dollars in September 2012. It says it has raised 262.3 million dollars since January 2015, about 20 million dollars more than it had by this time in 2012.

Mr Trump’s claims that he is being falsely accused of inappropriate conduct with women appeared undermined by a video that surfaced last week in which he bragged about kissing and groping women without their permission.

Similar behaviour was detailed by women who accused Mr Trump in articles published late on Wednesday by The New York Times and the Palm Beach Post.

Separately, a People magazine reporter offered a first-person account accusing Mr Trump of attacking her in 2005 while she was in Florida to interview him and his pregnant wife.

The New York billionaire denied the allegations and blamed them on Mrs Clinton’s campaign and a complicit news media.

He promised to sue his media critics and said he was preparing evidence that would discredit his female accusers, whom he called “horrible people. They’re horrible, horrible liars”.

For her part, Mrs Clinton said “the disturbing stories just keep on coming.”

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