Perhaps this was inevitable. As Donald Trump began to raise the specter of former President Bill Clinton’s alleged inappropriate behavior with women over the years it was easy to see that a parallel could be drawn to comedian Bill Cosby, who has been accused by dozens of women of sexual misconduct spanning multiple decades, allegations he has consistently denied, and who is back in the headlines after being criminally charged for the first time in connection to one his accusers.
Trump had relentlessly hammered the Clintons on a perceived strength — their record on women’s issues — with a particular emphasis on the former president’s past alleged infidelities. He began to conflate the allegations against Cosby with Clinton on Tuesday, telling a Boston radio host that it would be “very interesting” to ask the husband of Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton what the difference is between him and the embattled comedian. “Certainly he has a lot of very strong charges against him, and it’s pretty — pretty bad stuff,” Trump added in reference to the ex-president, his former golfing buddy and wedding guest.
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On Thursday, Trump pushed the envelope even further, including an image of Cosby at a Buffalo campaign event for Hillary Clinton when she was running for U.S. Senate out of New York at the end of an Instagram video. The video also included pictures of President Clinton with Monica Lewinsky and a nod to the Anthony Weiner sexting scandals (his wife Huma Abedin is a longtime aide to Hillary Clinton) under audio from a pro-women’s rights speech the 2016 Democratic candidate once gave. “Hillary and her friends!” Trump tweeted while sharing the link.
When asked about Trump’s recent broadsides against him on Thursday at a campaign even in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Bill Clinton told NBC News, “I don’t have a response. If he wins the Republican nomination, we’ll have plenty of time to talk about it if Hillary wins.”








