Besides Gennifer Flowers, other ex-mistresses of former U.S. President Bill Clinton are attending the presidential debate between Republican candidate Donald Trump and Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton on Monday night.
Flowers, who initially denied any relationship with the president in a 1992 TV interview but eventually admitted it in a 1998 deposition for the Paula Jones lawsuit, assured Trump through social media she would be at the presidential debate. Jones and Juanita Broaddrick – also accusers of Bill Clinton – said they would also attend the debate if invited, reported Brietbart.
Although Kathleen Willey, a White House aide during the Bill Clinton administration, claimed the number of alleged sex assault victims of the president are so many they could fill the entire audience of the debate, she admitted many of the women are afraid to come out in the open.
“The real story here is not one of our presence in the front row at any of these debates, but the unhindered lust for power that the Clintons have displayed for decades. Hillary Clinton has lied, cheated and stolen our lives from us. People have died in her wake of deceit,” accused Willey who said she would not attend the debate but let Hillary “do herself in on her own.”
Another Bill Clinton ex-mistress, Dolly Kyle, a former Dallas lawyer, claimed that the former president once boasted to her that he had sex with about 2,000 women.
While Trump is apparently trying to beat Hillary Clinton by using the issue of former mistresses of the president, The Washington Post, in an opinion piece, pointed out that it is beyond debate that Trump is unfit to be president. The daily believes it is beyond Trump’s capacity in the 90-minute question and answer sessions on Monday night to substantially reverse the newspaper’s conclusion that Trump “has amply demonstrated his unworthiness to occupy the Oval Office.”
And it added even if Trump manages to be presidential for one and a half hour, he cannot undo the many instances since 2011 he demonstrated he is not fit to lead the U.S.