After ad gaffe, North Dakota's Heitkamp
apologizes in Senate debate
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[October 19, 2018]
By Sharon Bernstein
(Reuters) - North Dakota Democratic U.S.
Senator Heidi Heitkamp, facing a tough re-election fight, opened her
debate on Thursday with Republican challenger Kevin Cramer by
apologizing for a recent ad that named sex assault survivors without
their consent.
The ad, intended to highlight her support of women following the brutal
debate over a U.S. Supreme Court nominee accused of sexual assault, was
an untimely gaffe for Heitkamp as she struggles to hang on to her seat
in next month's election in a state that Republican President Donald
Trump won by a landslide in 2016.
"Unfortunately, this week I not only disappointed many in North Dakota,
I disappointed myself," Heitkamp said. "My campaign wrongly listed many
names in a campaign ad that were not authorized and not appropriate.
This was a terrible mistake."
The race illustrates the challenge Democrats face in trying to take a
majority in the Senate in the Nov. 6 elections, which would require them
to pick up two more seats while defending about 10 embattled incumbents,
including first-term Heitkamp.
Most polls show Cramer, a three-term U.S. representative, leading the
race.
After Heitkamp's apology, Cramer seemed to see little need to go on the
attack, keeping a cordial tone as the two discussed immigration, sexual
assault, gun violence in schools and the impact of Trump's trade
tariffs.
Heitkamp defended her vote against Trump's Supreme Court nominee Brett
Kavanaugh, who was widely supported in the state, saying it was more
important to do what she believed to be the right thing than to follow
public opinion polls.
Cramer called the Kavanaugh hearings an example of mob rule, saying that
the opposition to his elevation to the highest U.S. court was
orchestrated to support a political agenda
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Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) discusses farm policy with a reporter
at Jamestown College, Jamestown, North Dakota, U.S. April 6, 2018.
Picture taken April 6, 2018. REUTERS/Dan Koeck/File Photo
"Brett Kavanaugh is a very, very good judge for North Dakota," he
said. Kavanaugh was confirmed by a 50-48 vote.
Asked about sexual violence and harassment, Cramer recommended
increasing the number of female police officers and harassment
training in businesses and throughout society.
"I'm not a woman, I have not been sexually assaulted. I don't know,"
he said. "But I know we can do a lot better job."
He criticized the #MeToo movement, saying: "What we can't have is
these big movements that become political movements that undercut
the integrity of the goal."
Heitkamp attempted to tie Cramer to Republican efforts to cut social
programs, including the Medicare and Social Security programs for
retirees.
"When you call these programs entitlement programs, it's an insult
to every senior citizen," she said.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif; Editing by
Scott Malone and Peter Cooney)
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