Trump slams Hillary Clinton for not 'protecting women' in video featuring voices of Bill's sex-assault and rape accusers

  • Instagram video short includes voices of sex-assault accuser Kathleen Willey and rape accuser Juanita Broaddrick
  • Both women have accused Bill Clinton of attacking them and say Hillary Clinton tried to smear them and cover it up
  • The 15-second video also includes a reference to Monica Lewinsky, in the form of a cigar clenched between Bill Clinton's teeth
  • Video ends with the sound of Hillary Clinton laughing uproariously while a message appears: 'Here we go again?'  

Donald Trump's latest effort to saddle Hillary Clinton with her husband's sexual indiscretions hit Instagram like a bomb on Monday.

'Is Hillary really protecting women?' Trump tweeted, along with a link to a short video featuring the voices of two of Bill's sexual-assault accusers, Juanita Broaddrick and Kathleen Willey.

The 15-second video also includes a reference to Clinton's former White House intern paramour Monica Lewinsky, in the form of a stogie clenched between the former president's teeth.

Independent Counsel Ken Star wrote in his bombshell report on the Clinton impeachment saga that the then-president sexually pleasured Lewinsky, then in her early twenties, with a cigar.

Broaddrick accused Clinton of raping her in a hotel room when he was the attorney general of Arkansas. Willey has charged that he groped and fondled her against her will in the Oval Office.

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IT'S WAR: Donald Trump suggested Monday that Hillary Clinton has selective outrage about sexual assault, looking the other way when her husband is the accused abuser

IT'S WAR: Donald Trump suggested Monday that Hillary Clinton has selective outrage about sexual assault, looking the other way when her husband is the accused abuser

THROWBACK: The new Trump Instagram video includes a jab at the Clintons and a visual reminder of the cigar the then-president used to pleasure a young female intern in the West Wing of the White House

'ENABLER': Hillary Clinton has been covering up Bill Clinton's infidelities and threatening the other women for decades, accorting to Kathleen Willey, one of the sex-assault accusers

'ENABLER': Hillary Clinton has been covering up Bill Clinton's infidelities and threatening the other women for decades, accorting to Kathleen Willey, one of the sex-assault accusers

Trump has gone after Hillary's marital weak spot before, claiming last week in a Fox News Channel interview that her Bill-induced image problems include 'rape.'

Hillary later said that she didn't feel compelled to defend her husband's 'honor' by responding.

The new Trump video includes a sound bites of Willey telling a Fox News Channel audience in 2007: 'No woman should be subjected to it. It was an assault.'

It also includes audio of Broaddrick accusing Bill Clinton of raping her in 1978.

'He starts to bite on my top lip,' she says in the voice-over, pulled from a 1999 'Dateline NBC' broadcast. 

'And I tried to pull away from him.'

The final sound of the video short is Hillary Clinton's voice – laughing – as an on-screen message asks, 'Here we go again?' 

A longer video might have been even more damning.  

Broaddrick told NBC immediately after the words Trump quoted: 'And then he forces me down on the bed. And I just was very frightened, and I tried to get away from him and I told him "No," that I didn’t want this to happen but he wouldn’t listen to me.'

'RAPED'? Juanita Broaddrick (shown at right in 1978) later accused then-Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton (2nd left) of forcing himself on her seexually in a hotel room

'RAPED'? Juanita Broaddrick (shown at right in 1978) later accused then-Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton (2nd left) of forcing himself on her seexually in a hotel room

'It was a real panicky, panicky situation,' she recounted. 'I was even to the point where I was getting very noisy, you know, yelling to "Please stop." And that’s when he pressed down on my right shoulder and he would bite my lip.'

'When everything was over with,' Broaddrick claimed, 'he got up and straightened himself, and I was crying at the moment and he walks to the door, and calmly puts on his sunglasses.'

'And before he goes out the door he says "You better get some ice on that." And he turned and went out the door.'

Willey said in the Fox News interview excerpted by Trump's social media team that Hillary Clinton 'claims to be and wants us to think that she's a champion of women's rights: She's a women's advocate, she's a feminist.'

But in reality, Willey claimed, 'she has enabled his behavior for over 30 years. This started way before they got married.'

The notion of Hillary as 'enabling' her husband's sexual conquests at the expense of a series of victims gained new currency when Broaddrick told a radio interviewer last November that the future first lady and secretary of state tried to ensure the incident would be kept a secret.

Three weeks after the alleged rape, she said, Hillary Clinton approached her at an Arkansas political fundraiser. 

She recalled how Hillary said to her: 'I just want you to know how much Bill and I appreciate the things you do for him,' implying a thank-you for her weeks of silence.

'And I just stood there ... I was sort of, you might say, shell-shocked,' Broaddrick explained.

'And she said, "Do you understand? Everything you do".'

'She tried to take a hold of my hand and I left,' she recalled. 'I told the girls I can’t take this. I’m leaving. So I immediately left.'

'What really went through my mind at that time is: "She knows. She knew. She’s covering it up and she expects me to do the very same thing".' 

Last September the Clinton campaign floated a pre-emptive strike against the idea that she looked the other way as her husband abused other women.

In a video of her own, she insisted Americans should reflexively side with young women on college campuses who accuse male students of sexual assault.

'You have the right to be heard. You have the right to be believed. We're with you,' the Democratic front-runner said in the video, which she addressed 'to every survivor of sexual assault.'

ME AND PAULA, PAULA JONES: The Arkansas government employee (left) got an $850,000 settlement in her sexual harassment suit against Bill Clinton, and Kathleen Willey (right) maintains to this day that Bill groped her in the White House when she was a political volunteer

Clinton also infamously defended an accused child rapist in the 1970s, filing papers with a criminal court that called into question the honesty of a 12-year-old female victim.

That girl, who has never been publicly named, told The Daily Beast in 2014 that Hillary smeared her and 'took me through Hell.'

Last November Clinton doubled down, tweeting that '[e]very survivor of sexual assault deserves to be heard, believed, and supported.'

A woman at a campaign rally days later turned those words back on her.

'You say that all rape victims should be believed, but would you say that about Juanita Broaddrick, Kathleen Willey, and/or Paula Jones?' she asked.

Jones sued Bill Clinton for sexual harassment, extracting an $850,000 settlement in a case that precipitated his impeachment.

Hillary visibly laughed at the question.

'Well,' she chuckled, 'I would say that everybody should be believed at first – until they are disbelieved based on evidence.'

 
 

TRANSCRIPT: '60 MINUTES' WITH KATHLEEN WILLEY (1998) 

Willey spoke with Ed Bradley on '60 Minutes' for an episode that aired March 15, 1998

Willey spoke with Ed Bradley on '60 Minutes' for an episode that aired March 15, 1998

The late CBS News correspondent Ed Bradley conducted an on-camera interview with Kathleen Willey that aired on March 15, 1998, in which she first made her startling claim that President Bill Clinton sexually assaulted her in the Oval Office. Below is a partial transcript. 

–––––– 

WILLEY: He took the coffee cup out of my hand and he put it on a bookshelf, and – and – he – this hug lasted a little longer than I thought necessary, but at the same time – I mean, I was not concerned about it. And then he – then he – and then he kissed me on – on my mouth, and – and pulled me closer to him. And – I remember thinking – I just remember thinking, 'What in the world is he doing?' I – it – I just thought, 'What is he doing?' And, I – I pushed back away from him, and – he – he – he – he – he's a big man. And he – he had his arms – they were tight around me, and he – he – he touched me.

BRADLEY: Touched you how?

WILLEY: Well, he – he – he touched my breasts with his hand, and, I – I – I – I was – I – I was just startled. I was – I was just –

BRADLEY: This – this wasn't an accidental grazing touch?

WILLEY: No. And – then he – whispered – he – he – said in – in my ears that, 'I – I've wanted to do this ever since I laid eyes on you.' And – I remember – I remember saying to him, 'aren't you afraid that somebody's going to walk in here?' The – and, he said – he said, 'no. No, I'm – no, I'm not.' And – and then – and – and then he took my hand, and he – and he put it on him. And, that's when I pushed away from him and – and decided it was time to get out of there.

BRADLEY: When you say he took your hand...

WILLEY: Right.

BRADLEY: ... and put it on him...

WILLEY: M-hm.

BRADLEY: Where on him?

WILLEY: On – on his genitals.

BRADLEY: Was he a – aroused?

WILLEY: Yes.

BRADLEY: He was.

WILLEY: Yes.

BRADLEY: What were you thinking?

WILLEY: Well, I – I was – there was – I – there were all kinds of things going through my mind. I – I think as – when I think back on it, it was kind of like I was watching it in slow motion, and – and thinking surely this is not happening. And, at the same time, I – I wanted to – I thought, 'Well, maybe I ought to just give him a good slap across the face.' And then I thought, 'Well, I don't think you can slap the President of the United States like that.' And – and I just decided it was just time to get out of there.

BRADLEY: Did you say anything to him, or was there anything about your behavior that invited an advance?

WILLEY: I – I – I have gone over this so many times, so very many times, because I think that your natural instinct is to wonder, 'Did I bring this on? Did I send a – a – the wrong signal?' The only signals that I was sending that day, was that I was very upset, very distraught, and I needed to help my husband.

BRADLEY: Did you feel intimidated?

WILLEY: I didn't feel intimidated. I just felt overpowered.

BRADLEY: Did you ever say, 'Stop. No. Get away from me?'

WILLEY: I just – I – I pushed him away.

Source: CBS News 

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