Good grief...this man has raped a woman and cheated on his wife with a porn star. He is immediately excluded from anything to do with decent society. I could care less what his policies are. They may align with everything I hold dear. They may be what I've argued for for many years. It doesn't matter in the slightest.
I refuse to accept that this is the new normal. I refuse to accept that a person like this should even be considered for office. I refuse to accept that this is the type of man that can run for any position at all with people telling us that we should ignore his character because, hey - we might like his policies.
It's become increasingly obvious that most people don't think like that when it comes to politics and policy.
This sentiment "we can find this major flaw in your candidate - up to and including felonies... therefore you should do the honorable thing and vote for our side that will advance all of our interests and throw all of your interests in the wastebin"
And I don't believe for a second US Democrats would employ the type of logic you're describing.
If "Republican Ralph" was anti-abortion, anti-climate, anti-LGBT, and was calling to abolish the Department of Education, and "Democrat Dave" embraced all progressive policy proposals, but had proven cases of marital infidelity and rape allegations against him... Does anyone actually believe for a second that US progressives would vote for Ralph on the grounds of "Dave's character is beyond forgiveness"?
...and for the record, this isn't the
new normal. Republicans tried the same approach with Bill Clinton back in the 90's. They dragged out all of his marital infidelities.
And yes, there were credible allegations that some of them were non-consensual.
en.wikipedia.org
Did that inspire any democrats to abandon all of their principles and vote for HW Bush or Bob Dole?
Or was that just a cheap trick by the republicans at the time to feign concern about a matter (that they didn't really care about, it was just low-hanging fruit in terms of a political strategy) to try to help their team win?
The reason why
zeroing in on the other side's sexual indiscretions is such an easy lever to pull in US politics, is because that behavior (unfortunately) has been somewhat ubiquitous within the field of federal politics for quite some time.
en.wikipedia.org
If I understand this correctly (and correct me if I'm wrong about this next part)...
Perhaps the reason for the mindset being different from onlookers in other countries is due to the differences between our system, and the parliamentary systems. The parliamentary system gives people the luxury of voting for party/platform (and party leaders select the PM). And the PM can be swapped out with another member of the party should bad behavior like this be uncovered.
So it
A) allows people to morally distance themselves from whatever bad stuff is uncovered about a PM "Hey I didn't vote for the person, I voted for the party/platform"
B) allows for the "hot swap" I mentioned, so even if it turns out the PM was a scumbag, they can be replaced with another member of the party quickly, so that people can get the "bad guy" out, without having to completely throw their policy interests in the wastebin for 4 years by voting for the other team's guy
In a nutshell, for people living under parliamentary systems, being able to say "I would never vote for a guy like that...no matter what" is a luxury in the same way that it'd be a luxury for a rich trust-fund kid with their dad's platinum card to say "I'd never shoplift...no matter what"...they're never being presented the same type of moral dilemma involving the potential for not getting what they want.