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Nikki Haley Says Women Who Accuse Trump of Misconduct ‘Should Be Heard’ - The New York Times

posted onDecember 11, 2017
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WASHINGTON — Nikki R. Haley, the American ambassador to the United Nations, said on Sunday that women who have accused President Trump of sexual misconduct “should be heard,” a surprising break from the administration’s longstanding assertion that the allegations are false and that voters rightly dismissed them when they elected Mr. Trump. Ms. Haley, a former governor and one of the highest-ranking women in Mr.

Haley: Trump's accusers of sex misconduct should be heard - ABC News

posted onDecember 11, 2017
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The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations said Sunday that women who accuse someone of sexual misconduct deserve to be heard, even if it involves President Donald Trump. "I know that he was elected, but women should always feel comfortable coming forward. And we should all be willing to listen to them," Nikki Haley said on CBS' "Face the Nation." Trump, a Republican, won the Al Franken, D-Minn., and Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz.

Trump has 'no appreciation for diplomacy': Senate Democrat - ABC News

posted onDecember 11, 2017
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The top Democrat on the Senate Israel's capital but that the announcement should have been handled with greater diplomacy and as a way to advance the Middle East peace process. "We’ve seen this in so many places of the world, that Mr. Trump has no appreciation for diplomacy," Sen. Emmanuel Macron, spoke out against Trump's decision. "There was a right way of doing this," Cardin said.

Shelby bucks Alabama GOP leaders in voting against Moore - ABC News

posted onDecember 11, 2017
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In his sternest rebuke yet, Alabama Sen. Roy Moore to the U.S. Senate, making clear that a write-in candidate was far preferable to a man accused of sexual misconduct. Days before the pivotal race, Shelby, who is Alabama's senior senator, said he had already cast an absentee ballot for another, unspecified Republican, even as other prominent state Republicans fell in line behind Moore. Moore faces Democrat Doug Jones in the special election Tuesday to replace Jeff Sessions, now the U.S.