Criticism of Joe Biden's treatment of Anita Hill continues to nag presidential campaign

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s handling of Anita Hill’s sexual harassment allegation against then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas is once again in the headlines, ahead of the next round of voting in the Democratic presidential primary.

On Tuesday, voters go to the polls in Michigan, the most-delegate-rich prize of the six states that cast ballots on March 10.

Michigan congresswoman and Bernie Sanders supporter Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., recently evoked Biden's role as the Democratic chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1991 when Hill accused Thomas of sexual harassment.

"Q: Who silenced Anita Hill when she was trying to speak out about Clarence Thomas?," she tweeted last week, "A: Joe Biden"

Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot endorsed Biden for president on Friday, and Politico called attention to her previous criticism of Biden over the Hill-Thomas matter.

“I don’t think Anita Hill needs his apology," she said in a 2019 interview on the political news site, "but give an account of your behavior with a lot of hindsight. I don’t know that he’s successfully done that yet.”

The Fox Nation documentary “The Confirmation Chronicles Vol. 2: High-Tech Lynching” re-examined Justice's Thomas confirmation and Biden's role in it.

Former Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, told Fox Nation that Biden confessed to him during the proceedings that he did not believe Hill, which directly contradicts what Biden has publically said on the topic.

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“Biden told me personally that he didn’t believe her. He said, ‘I don't know why she did this.’" said Hatch. "I don't mean to malign Joe, but Joe told me he didn’t believe her and there were some others that told me that, too."

In 2017, appearing at a Glamour’s Women of the Year event in New York, Biden said that he “believed Anita Hill” during the Thomas hearings.

During an interview on ABC’s "The View" in April, shortly after Biden launched his current presidential campaign, Biden said “I believed her from the beginning. I was against Clarence Thomas. I did everything in my power to defeat Clarence Thomas …”

Several days later, during an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” Biden said again, “I believed her from the very beginning.”

Biden's version of events have also been contradicted by Armstrong Williams, a radio host and former colleague of Thomas.

"Biden made it clear that he'd spoken to Metzenbaum, Simon, and Kennedy and said clearly, 'We don't believe these charges and nor does the evidence support it,'" said Williams on Fox Nation's "Deep Dive," in reference to the late senators, Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, Paul Simon D-Ill., and Teddy Kennedy D-Mass., who were also members of the committee that heard testimony from Thomas and Hill.

Williams continued, "In the end, Biden assured [Thomas], repeatedly on the phone and in person, 'Clarence, you will be confirmed'. And he was."

Biden has apologized for the way Hill was treated during the hearings, but he has defended his own conduct.

In April, Biden had a private conversation with Hill during which he expressed his regret for the treatment that she received, but she reportedly wasn't satisfied with his comments.

To watch all of “The Confirmation Chronicles Vol. 2: High-Tech Lynching,” go to Fox Nation and sign up today.

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