Retired businesswoman Elaine Loesch calls the actions of disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and convicted rapist Bill Cosby "horrendous," and she credits the #MeToo movement for bringing them to light.
But Loesch, a Republican, said #MeToo has gone off the rails with the allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. Loesch said she has not heard of any evidence that corroborates Christine Blasey Ford's account of a drunken assault by Kavanaugh at an early '80s high school gathering.
"I think she is fabricating the whole thing," said Loesch after weighing Ford's testimony last week in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Loesch, 72, is part of a chorus of Republican men and women in Minnesota who continue to embrace Kavanaugh's nomination to the nation's highest court, despite the allegations that have sparked an epic showdown and an FBI investigation. Many say they're eager for another justice who brings more conservative ideals to the court, and they view Ford's allegations as a partisan attack.
"He's an excellent candidate," said Loesch, a Rosemount resident who is a member of the Minnesota Federation of Republican Women but doesn't speak for the group. "They are out to destroy him. That's what is so sad. They are willing to sacrifice a man's family and reputation and career."
The showdown is also energizing #MeToo activists who remain firmly against Kavanaugh's nomination, particularly those scarred by their own sexual assault. The two sides are sending a torrent of e-mails, letters and calls to senators who are weighing his lifelong appointment to the bench.
Attorney Andy Brehm was initially pleased to hear that Kavanaugh was President Donald Trump's pick, calling him an "excellent jurist" with a "phenomenal reputation in terms of his character as well as his jurisprudence."
When Ford's allegations surfaced, Brehm said he supported an investigation because "any allegation of this nature should be taken seriously."