Joe Biden is coming under growing pressure over a former aides allegation that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s.
Pressure is mounting on Joe Biden, the presumptive US Democratic presidential nominee, to respond to a sexual assault allegation made by a former Senate aide in the 1990s.
Tara Reade, 56, claims that the sexual assault occurred in 1993, when she was a 29-year-old staff assistant for Biden, then a US senator from Delaware.
Kate Bedingfield, the deputy manager and communications director of Bidens election campaign, issued a statement rejecting the allegation. However, there has been no comment do far from Biden himself.
The denial, however, has not eased media coverage of the claims, which have overshadowed other news about the 77-year-old former vice-president.
President Donald Trumps reelection campaign increasingly has tried to capitalize on the allegations against Biden.
On Wednesday, the Republican presidents campaign spokesman, Tim Murtaugh, told media outlets that Biden was seeking to shield himself from criticism by avoiding personally addressing Reades allegation.
Biden has not been asked directly about the allegation in the online events and interviews conducted from his home in Wilmington, Delaware, where he has been confined due to the coronavirus pandemic.
"We were alone, and it was the strangest thing," Reade said in a late March interview on the Katie Halper Show podcast.
Other women have accused Biden of touching or embracing them inappropriately in the past.
The allegations have led some Democratic voters to call on the former vice president to end his White House campaign.
"There is simply no moral justification for Biden to continue as the presumptive nominee," said Claire Sandberg, the former national organizing director of Senator Bernie Sanders campaign.
"Out of respect for survivors and for the good of the country, he should withdraw from the race," she added.
Sanders, a onetime front-runner in the Democratic race for the White House, ended his election campaign last month and endorsed Biden.
A Reuters/Ipsos survey conducted this week about a general election matchup showed 44 percent of Americans would vote for Biden in the election, while 40 percent would vote for Trump.
SOURCE: PRESS TV
LINK: https://www.ansarpress.com/english/16709
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