(CNN)As
a swirl of sexual impropriety allegations roil Washington, President
Donald Trump's top aides are trying to inoculate him from comparisons
with the stories of more than a dozen women who have accused Trump of
sexual misconduct.
But the allegations against Minnesota Democratic Sen. Al Franken, who apologized after
a California radio host and model said he had groped and kissed her
without consent in 2006, and Roy Moore, the Republican Senate candidate
in Alabama who has been accused by multiple women of pursuing sexual relationships
with them as teenagers when he was in his early 30s, have dredged up
the allegations last year made against Trump, including the 2005 Access Hollywood tape in which Trump brags about sexually assaulting women.
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Friday that there are no similarities between the Trump and Franken accusations.
Her reason: Trump never admitted wrongdoing and Franken did.
"This
was covered pretty extensively during the campaign. We addressed it
then," Sanders said. "The American people spoke very loud and clear when
they elected this President."
Asked
directly about how there could be a difference, Sanders said, "Senator
Franken has admitted wrongdoing and the President hasn't."
The
similarities, however, have created an awkward situation for those in
the White House who are now left to defend accusations against Trump
while supporting an investigation into the reports about Franken.
Marc
Short, Trump's top legislative aide, told CNN on Friday that Trump was
saying there was a "level of hypocrisy" involving Franken given that the
senator had condemned Moore and others. Short went on to defend Trump's
comments in the Access Hollywood tape, where Trump bragged about
grabbing women.
"When you're a
star, they let you do it," Trump says on the recording, which was
published during the 2016 election campaign. "You can do anything."
Regarding
those comments, Short told CNN: "He was apologetic about that. He
apologized to his wife and family and the American people about what he
considered locker room behavior. He is not trying to excuse it."
At least 13 women have come forward
to accuse Trump of sexual impropriety, allegations that range from
sexual harassment and misconduct to sexual assault, including unwanted
kissing and groping. All of the alleged incidents took place prior to
his assuming the presidency.
Trump did little to help aides tasked with defending him when, on Thursday night, he tweeted about Franken.
"The
Al Frankenstien picture is really bad, speaks a thousand words. Where
do his hands go in pictures 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 while she sleeps," Trump
tweeted. "And to think that just last week he was lecturing anyone who
would listen about sexual harassment and respect for women. Lesley Stahl
tape?"
Trump
was referring to a 1995 New York Magazine profile quoting Franken on
writing a joke about drugging and raping journalist Lesley Stahl.
Trump
has yet to directly comment -- or tweet -- about Moore, whose Senate
candidacy is imperiled by the mounting accusations against him.
During
his lengthy recent trip to Asia, Trump dodged questions about the
candidate by claiming that he wasn't watching TV or paying attention to
news back home. The President also ignored a question about Moore
shouted by a reporter on Friday.
White
House adviser Kellyanne Conway claimed on Friday that Trump has
remained silent on Moore because he was in Asia when the story broke and
it wasn't new when he returned to Washington.
"Well,
Al Franken was a brand-new news story yesterday and the President
weighed in as he does on the news of the day often enough," Conway told
Fox News. "The Roy Moore story is eight days old and the President put
out a statement on his Asia trip on that."
Sanders
wouldn't say on Friday whether Trump believes the women accusing Moore
of impropriety, but did reiterate that the President finds the charges
"extremely troubling" and believes that it is up to "the governor and
... the people in the state of Alabama to make a determination on
whether or not they delay that election or whether or not they support
and vote for Roy Moore."
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