Cuomo allegations: What do Democrats who believed Kavanaugh accusations think?

Kavanaugh and Cuomo both denied allegations against them

Many leading Democrats who demanded an investigation into Christine Blasey Ford’s sexual misconduct allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh are less outspoken about the accusations against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Ford told the Washington Post in 2018 that Kavanaugh "groped" her and made unwelcome advances in 1982 when they were high school students at different schools.

Earlier this week, former Cuomo aide Lindsey Boylan wrote in a post on Medium that Cuomo had made unwanted advances toward her, forcibly kissed her and suggested she "play strip poker" with him.

ANDREW CUOMO ACCUSED OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT; LEADING LIBERAL WOMEN REFUSE COMMENT

Kavanaugh and Cuomo both denied the allegations.

(AP)

But Cuomo had called Kavanaugh's eventual Supreme Court confirmation a "sham" and said it would energize Americans "to fight even harder for our shared vision for a better future for all."

He also suggested the new Supreme Court justice take a polygraph test.

The White House appeared to distance itself from Cuomo Thursday, with press secretary Jen Psaki saying "any allegation should be reviewed."

Sens. Dianne Feinstein, Amy Klobuchar, Mazie Hirono, Patrick Leahy, Cory Booker, Richard Blumenthal – all of whom were among the Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee during Kavanaugh's nomination hearings in 2018 – did not respond to questions about whether Ford’s allegations were any different from those of Boylan.

Democrats had painted the claims against Kavanaugh as at least worthy of an investigation and possibly disqualifying, while their Republican counterparts argued he had a right to due process.

Christine Blasey Ford is sworn in before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2018, in Washington. (Win McNamee/Pool Image via AP) (2018 Getty Images)

"At a bare minimum, this week’s scheduled committee vote on Judge Kavanaugh’s lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court must be postponed until this matter is fully and thoroughly investigated," Booker said at the time.

CUOMO ACCUSED OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT BY FORMER AIDE

"Her story is credible, and I believe her," Hirono said of Ford in a 2018 statement. "As I said during the hearing, this is why the #MeToo movement is so important, because often in these situations, there is an environment where people see nothing, hear nothing, and say nothing. That is what we have to change."

"She had a lot of credibility when she spoke about her memories from that night," Klobuchar said of Ford’s testimony during a 2018 interview with NPR.

Lindsey Boylan attends The 9th Annual Elly Awards Hosted By The Women's Forum Of New York on June 17, 2019, in New York City. (Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Women's Forum of New York) (Getty Images)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who in a statement in 2018 declared, "I believe Dr. Christine Blasey Ford," also declined to comment.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren questioned whether Kavanaugh was "hiding" something during his confirmation process. She declined to comment on the Boylan case.

And Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, an outspoken supporter of women’s rights who had blasted former Senate colleague Al Franken, D-Minn., as he was ousted following his own misconduct allegations in 2018, did not respond to Fox News’ requests for comment on her home-state governor.

She told reporters later Thursday: "These allegations are serious and deeply concerning and anyone has a right to come forward to be heard and to have allegations be investigated. Gov. Cuomo also has a right to be heard and he has come forward and has denied these allegations, but ultimately the decision will be up to the state Legislature."

In 2018, she argued on Twitter that the #MeToo movement boiled down to a single question:

"Do we value women?" she wrote. "Dr. Christine Blasey Ford deserves to tell her story. She deserves respect and a full investigation."

Some New York Democrats have demanded a probe into the Boylan accusations, including state Assemblyman Ron Kim, who has feuded with the governor over reports that the Cuomo administration had underreported coronavirus deaths among senior citizens in care facilities by as much as 50%.

"With any allegation there, there has to be a due process," Cuomo’s fellow New York Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Thursday.

In 2018, she said Kavanaugh had been "credibly accused of sexual assault," despite a lack of evidence, and claimed he would lie under oath

Her office ignored requests for comment on the allegations against Cuomo Wednesday, but she later told reporters that responsibility to investigate the governor "falls squarely in the state Legislature" – which is controlled by Democrats.

"And so defining what that process looks like in the in the state Legislature is something that I'd certainly defer to them," she said.

Elias Farah, a member of the Sexual Harassment Working Group, a bipartisan group formed to combat sexual harassment at New York’s State Capitol by lawmakers and their aides, told Fox News Thursday that the state’s current legislative investigative body is not sufficiently independent from Cuomo to conduct a comprehensive probe.

He noted that when state lawmakers are accused of misconduct, they have nearly unlimited access to legal resources – on the taxpayers’ dime. Oftentimes, those attorneys bill the state far more than the victims are even asking for, he said.

He also referenced the infamous Moreland Commission – Cuomo’s handpicked anti-corruption panel -- which the governor dismissed amid allegations he was interfering with investigations into his allies in 2014.

"Taxpayers should actually ask – why isn’t there an independent commission?" Farah said. "This is America. We’re not a fascist state. We’re not a communist state."

The SHWG demanded an immediate independent investigation into Boylan’s allegations Wednesday.

"If people are gonna come out and speak against somebody like Kavanaugh, they also need to speak out against the governor," Farah said.

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He also said accusers deserve their own due process when they come forward with allegations.

"I know personally that is not an easy thing to do," he said, referring to his sexual harassment case against his ex-boss, former GOP state Rep. Angela Wozniak. "And if you’re going to subject yourself to the criticism that’s going to come with that, you must have some veracity to your statements."

Fox News' Houston Keene contributed to this report.

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