Biden faces pressure to address sexual assault allegation

Ms Tara Reade alleges that Mr Joe Biden assaulted her in 1993, when she was a 29-year-old staff assistant in the office of the then senator from Delaware. PHOTOS: NYTIMES
Ms Tara Reade alleges that Mr Joe Biden assaulted her in 1993, when she was a 29-year-old staff assistant in the office of the then senator from Delaware. PHOTOS: NYTIMES

WASHINGTON • His campaign has strongly denied it but pressure is mounting on Mr Joe Biden, the US Democratic presidential hopeful, to personally respond to a sexual assault allegation made by a former Senate aide.

Ms Tara Reade, 56, claims that the assault took place in 1993, when she was a 29-year-old staff assistant in the office of Mr Biden, then a senator from Delaware.

Ms Kate Bedingfield, Mr Biden's deputy campaign manager and communications director, has issued a statement dismissing the allegation but there has been no comment so far from the 77-year-old former vice-president himself.

"Vice-President Biden has dedicated his public life to changing the culture and the laws around violence against women," Ms Bedingfield said in the April 13 statement. "What is clear about this claim: it is untrue," she said.

"This absolutely did not happen."

The denial has, however, done little to calm media coverage of the claims, which have drowned out other news about Mr Biden, such as his search for a running mate, who he has pledged will be a woman.

President Donald Trump's campaign manager Brad Parscale has flooded his Twitter feed with mocking references to Ms Reade's allegation, ignoring the string of accusations made by women against his own candidate.

More than a dozen women have accused the real estate mogul of sexual misconduct before he became president, including a writer who claims he raped her in a Manhattan department store.

Mr Biden has not been asked directly about Ms Reade's allegation in the interviews he has given from his Delaware home, where he has been confined because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The question has also not come up at the various online events he has held, including one on Tuesday during which 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton endorsed his White House bid.

According to Ms Reade, the assault took place in August 1993 in a hallway on Capitol Hill. "We were alone, and it was the strangest thing," she said in a late March interview on the Katie Halper Show podcast. "There was no, like, exchange, really, he just had me up against the wall. His hands were on me and underneath my clothes and, yeah, he went, he went down my skirt but then up inside it and he penetrated me with his fingers," she said. "He was kissing me at the same time."

According to Ms Reade, she pulled away and Mr Biden allegedly said: " 'Come on man, I heard you liked me.' For me, everything shattered at that moment."

Ms Reade has since recounted her story to several other media outlets and, according to US press reports, she filed a complaint with the Washington police in early April but did not name Mr Biden.

Other women have accused Mr Biden of touching or embracing them inappropriately in the past, and Ms Reade's initial claims were similar - less severe than her most recent allegations.

The New York Times reported that it had interviewed Ms Reade on multiple occasions, along with her friends and others who worked for Mr Biden in the early 1990s.

According to the Times, no former Biden staffers corroborated her account, and a pattern of misconduct was not uncovered.

The allegations have led some supporters of Senator Bernie Sanders, who dropped out of the race for the Democratic nomination and endorsed Mr Biden, to call on the latter to end his White House bid.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on May 01, 2020, with the headline Biden faces pressure to address sexual assault allegation. Subscribe