A Democratic congressional candidate — a self-described lesbian Latina progressive who checks roughly every identity box the Left has ever invented — has been accused by four separate women of making unwanted sexual advances. Four. Not one disgruntled ex. Not a political hit job from a rival campaign. Four individual women, all telling similar stories.
Wild how quiet everybody got all of a sudden, huh?
Remember Brett Kavanaugh? One accusation — one — with zero corroborating witnesses, and the entire United States Senate turned into a daytime talk show for six straight weeks. CNN ran wall-to-wall coverage. MSNBC brought on body language experts. Nancy Pelosi stood at a podium and told America that we must “believe all women” because questioning an accuser is itself a form of violence.
Four accusers just showed up for a Democrat, and you can hear the crickets from space.
Here’s how the playbook works. When a Republican gets accused, it’s a “pattern of predatory behavior” and a “national reckoning.” When a Democrat gets accused — by four women, mind you — it’s a “developing situation” that requires “nuance” and “due process.”
Oh, NOW we believe in due process? Somebody write that down.
The candidate in question was running as exactly the kind of progressive champion the Democratic Party loves to put on a poster. Historic candidacy. Barrier-breaking. “First Latina lesbian to run for Congress in this district” — you know the drill. The press had already written the puff pieces. The fundraising emails were drafted. The narrative was locked and loaded.
Then four women torpedoed the whole thing.
(Awkward.)
And look — we’re not the ones who made the rules here. Democrats spent years building the #MeToo framework. They told us that accusers must be believed. They told us that “patterns” of behavior are especially damning. They told us that power dynamics make these situations inherently coercive. They impeached a Supreme Court nominee over less evidence than this.
So where’s the hearing? Where’s the CNN countdown clock? Where’s Alyssa Milano with a poster?
Gone. All of it. Vanished like Hunter Biden’s laptop the first time around.
The Conservative Review broke this story, and as of right now, the mainstream press is treating it like a classified document — available only to people with the right clearance level. Which in media terms means: only if the accused has an (R) after their name.
We’ve seen this movie before. Democrats built an entire political infrastructure around weaponizing sexual misconduct allegations against Republicans. They destroyed careers, confirmation hearings, and reputations based on the principle that women don’t lie about these things. But the moment the accused is on their team? Suddenly every journalist in America needs to “verify the claims” and “wait for all the facts.”
Four women came forward. The standard Democrats set says that’s a five-alarm fire. By their own rules, this candidate should be radioactive — dropped by the party, condemned by leadership, and covered by every outlet with a press badge.
Instead? Silence.
The #BelieveAllWomen crowd doesn’t actually believe all women. They believe *useful* women. Women who accuse the right targets at the right time for the right political outcome. Everyone else gets the “let’s not rush to judgment” treatment that Kavanaugh never got.
Funny how principles work when they’re not actually principles — just weapons you pick up and put down depending on who’s in the crosshairs.
Four accusers. A Democratic candidate. And the loudest voices in American feminism just went on mute. Classic.
