Donald Trump’s effort to overcome his deep unpopularity among female voters was dealt a setback on Friday as decades-old domestic-violence allegations surfaced against Stephen Bannon, the controversial new chief executive of his campaign.
In January 1996, according to a police report, Bannon grabbed his wife’s wrist and neck, then smashed a phone when she tried to call 911 from their Santa Monica home. Police photographed “red marks on her left wrist and the right side of her neck,” the report said.
Years earlier, three or four other arguments also “became physical,” Bannon’s wife, Mary Louise Piccard, told the police. The couple divorced soon after the 1996 altercation.
The police charged Bannon with misdemeanor domestic violence, battery and dissuading a witness. Bannon pleaded not guilty, records show.
The charges were ultimately dropped when Piccard did not show up in court, according to Politico and the New York Post, which first reported the case.
Details of the case emerged just hours after Trump’s Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, faulted him for hiring Bannon last week in the latest shakeup of his campaign’s high command.
Clinton portrayed Bannon as a right-wing extremist who promoted racist, “anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant, antiwomen” ideas as chairman of the Breitbart News Network web site.
Bannon, 62, took a leave from Breitbart last week to serve as CEO of the Republican presidential nominee’s campaign. The Trump campaign did not respond to inquiries about the police report.
Alexandra Preate, Bannon’s spokesman at Breitbart, declined to comment on the specific allegations, apart from pointing out that the charges were dismissed.
“He has a great relationship with his ex-wife,” she said.
The abuse allegations against Bannon surfaced, as Clinton and her allies have been highlighting Trump’s history of making derogatory remarks about women.
Clinton led Trump among female voters 58 percent to 35 percent in a Washington Post/ABC News poll at the beginning of August, and 60 percent of those polled overall said they saw Trump as biased against both women and minorities.
Los Angeles Times/TNS