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In late 2019, we received multiple inquiries from readers about the accuracy of a widely shared article that claimed The New York Times had affirmed that billionaire philanthropist George Soros and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had paid a woman to accuse U.S. President Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her. On Nov. 29, the right-leaning website TheRedPilledNews published an article with the headline The New York Times Affirms: 'Soros and Clinton Paid Woman to Accuse Trump of Sexual Attack. The article reported that: The Times article referred to in the post was published on Dec. 31, 2017. It outlined the efforts of actors from both major parties to capitalize upon and amplify allegations of sexual misconduct on the part of politicians, as well as providing support and financial backing to their accusers. The Times piece noted the concerns expressed by some activists for sexual assault survivors that this involvement of money in the broader #MeToo movement could muddy the waters and create the misperception that some women, genuine survivors of sexual misconduct, were being paid to fabricate false allegations against male politicians. Contrary to TheRedPilledNews' claim, the article did not aver that Soros and Clinton Paid Woman to Accuse Trump of Sexual Attack. Nor did the Times' article state that anyone, whether associated with Soros or Clinton or otherwise, had paid anyone in order to induce them to accuse Trump of anything. Therefore, TheRedPilledNews' claim was false. Rather, the Times article examined the phenomenon of fundraising and donations for women who have accused, or were about to accuse, politicians and other public figures of sexual misconduct. As one example, the piece outlined the actions of Lisa Bloom, an attorney best known for representing women who have accused high-profile men of sexual wrongdoing (but who also briefly acted as an adviser to the movie producer Harvey Weinstein, while he was accused by multiple women of sexual harassment and sexual assault). The article reported that: The Times article described practices that some observers might find ethically questionable, and some readers might well be uncomfortable with any injection whatsoever of partisan politics or fundraising into an allegation of sexual misconduct. However, the article did not state as fact any allegation that Bloom or other lawyers had taken part in an operation that involved paying women in order to induce them to make false allegations, as opposed to accepting donations to defray the costs involved in vetting would-be accusers, or securing their safety once they go public. The article added: [Bloom] said that she did not receive any legal fees for the work, and that she did not communicate with Mrs. Clinton or her campaign 'on any of this.' She said she represented only clients whose stories she had corroborated, and disputed the premise that she offered money to coax clients to come forward. More specific allegations about Bloom's actions came in a December 2017 article by John Solomon, published by the political news website The Hill. Those allegations can be found here. In November 2019, The Hill announced it had begun a review of several of Solomon's articles, after witnesses at Congressional hearings into the impeachment of Trump described the stories as being of questionable veracity. Solomon's association with The Hill ended earlier in 2019. Neither Solomon's story nor the Times' article claimed Clinton had been involved in any payment designed to induce anyone to make any allegation, false or otherwise, against anyone, including Trump. Neither article even mentioned Soros.
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