In at least four primary races around the country, women have accused Republican candidates of domestic abuse and sexual violence. The details of the allegations are depressing, but even more depressing is the seeming reaction from GOP voters, which includes an apparent shrug and a growing belief that only liberals care about men hurting women.
The accused are running for a U.S. House seat in Ohio, the governorship in Nebraska and U.S. Senate seats in Georgia and Missouri. Eric Greitens, the former governor of Missouri, is trying to make a political comeback. He resigned in 2018 after a woman with whom he’d been having an affair claimed under oath that he had assaulted her and threatened to blackmail with her nude photos he’d taken without her permission.
A certain level of attempted victim blaming and gaslighting has become the routine response from Republicans accused of harassment, abuse and violence.
That past scandal would be a political minefield to navigate on its own. But last month, Greitens’ ex-wife alleged in an affidavit related to their custody dispute that the former governor physically abused her and their youngest son before their divorce. Sheena Greitens claimed that in April 2018 “Eric knocked me down and confiscated my cell phone, wallet and keys so that I was unable to call for help or extricate myself and our children from our home.”
Moreover, she alleges that his “behavior included physical violence toward our children, such as cuffing our then three-year-old son across the face at the dinner table in front of me and yanking him around by his hair.”
Greitens has denied the allegations and says he loves his sons. By claiming in a statement that he hopes Sheena Greiten “gets the help that she needs,” he has hinted that his ex-wife is mentally unstable. In that same statement, he accuses his ex of plotting with “political operatives.”
In previous elections, Greitens’ resignation and his ex-wife’s allegations that he’d abused her and one of their sons would be fodder for campaign ads and stump speeches from Greitens’ rivals. Instead, as The New York Times recently catalogued, the response from his opponents has mostly been crickets.
The same phenomenon can be seen regarding Charles Herbster, the candidate running to follow Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, who’s serving his second and final term. Last week, eight women accused Herbster of sexually assaulting them. One of them, Julie Slama, is a Republican state senator who said Herbster reached up her skirt and groped her in 2019 during a local Republican Party event.
And yet, despite these serious allegations, Herbster, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump in October, isn’t just continuing to run his race; he’s running as the victim. “They did it with Brett Kavanaugh. They certainly did it with Donald J. Trump, and now they’re trying to do it with Charles W. Herbster,” he told a local radio station, according to The Times, while claiming that the allegations are just an attack from his rivals, including, he says, Gov. Ricketts.
Herbster has even released a new ad saying the same: “Just like the establishment attacked President Trump, now they’re attacking me.”
Just like the establishment attacked President Trump, now they’re lying about me.
— Charles W. Herbster (@CWHerbster) April 16, 2022
The truth is I’m a 5th generation farmer and rancher, proud to call Nebraska home.
The political establishment… they’re scared of losing power and that’s the truth. pic.twitter.com/xrPOHU693k
That level of attempted victim blaming and gaslighting has become the routine response from Republicans accused of harassment, abuse and violence. The idea that we should “believe women” is something only Democratic voters say and believe.
The kinds of accusations made against Greitens and Herbster have “become deeply partisan in terms of beliefs about what is acceptable and what is appropriate,” Kelly Dittmar, a professor at the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University, told The Times. “And now it’s fallen into the talk of ‘cancel culture’ in the broader society.”








