Arnold Schwarzenegger has gone on the attack, denouncing the latest sexual harassment allegations made against him as untrue and charging that all of the 11th-hour accusations were intended to wreck his campaign for governor.
The Austrian-born candidate, also accused of expressing admiration for Adolf Hitler nearly 30 years ago, received support on Saturday from a leader of a Jewish human rights organisation and the man who trained the teenage Schwarzenegger as a bodybuilder, both of whom said the actor has championed tolerance.
The harassment allegations earned Schwarzenegger criticism from his rivals in the final debate of the campaign, which the actor sat out.
The Democrats’ Cruz Bustamante said if one of his three daughters had experienced the groping Schwarzenegger is alleged to have committed “it wouldn’t have taken a campaign to resolve it”.
Green Party candidate Peter Camejo suggested Schwarzenegger has gotten away with harassing women all these years because he’s rich, white and famous.
“If he were a black man, he’d be in jail. If he was brown, he’d be in jail. If he were a poor white he’d be in jail,” said Camejo.
“What does it tell us about our society that a rich white person can do the type of things that he’s alleged to have done?”
State Senator Tom McClintock, Schwarzenegger’s main Republican rival, agreed that the accusations were serious and called for investigation. But he added extra caution was needed because the allegations surfaced so close to Tuesday’s election.
Also on Saturday, the Democratic National Committee issued a resolution calling on Schwarzenegger to apologise for the alleged Hitler remarks. The action star dismissed the move as “sleaze politics” and said for the third consecutive day that he despises Hitler.
During a stop near Clovis on day three of his bus trip across the state, Schwarzenegger denied the latest harassment allegations.
“The last accusations that I read today are absolutely untrue. They’re trying to torpedo my campaign. They’re trying to make me look bad out there so that people vote no,” said Schwarzenegger, who has been leading in polls on the recall election.
“Why has this not come out before?” he said of allegations by 11 women that he groped or sexually harassed them.
“Why have they not called me? Why has no one said, ‘Arnold, you went too far’? If someone said this to me I would apologise immediately.”
Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney cancelled his plans to campaign Monday for the actor, saying he still supports Schwarzenegger but wanted to avoid “sideshow politics” surrounding Tuesday’s gubernatorial recall election.
Meanwhile, Davis flew around the state with several big-name Democrats in a final effort to persuade people to vote no on the recall. Recent polls showed more than 50% of likely voters want him removed from office. Bustamante and McClintock also made campaign appearances.
Much of the focus remained on the front-runner Schwarzenegger, however, after the Los Angeles Times reported Thursday that six women claimed he groped or sexually harassed them between 1975 and 2000.
After the story was published, five other women came forward to report similar incidents, including two who said on Friday the actor harassed them on the set of the 1988 film Twins.
Another woman said she was an intern at CNN in the early 1980s when Schwarzenegger groped her buttocks and made untoward remarks about her anatomy as she was escorting him to a set.
Schwarzenegger, who apologised on Thursday for having sometimes “behaved badly” around women, said the latest allegations were untrue.
In Merced, where he was joined by his wife, Maria Shriver, Schwarzenegger joked briefly about the allegations, pulling away when a supporter at an In-n-Out burger stand attempted to hug him.
“Don’t do it! Don’t do it! Otherwise it will be in the paper again,” he told her before relenting.
Schwarzenegger said he suspected the governor’s supporters were behind the allegations, but Davis has denied any connection. The Times has said none of the first six accusers were put in touch with the newspaper by any of Schwarzenegger’s opponents. The others came forward after the first story broke.
Meanwhile, Austrian gym owner Kurt Marnul said on Saturday that as a teenager Schwarzenegger helped break up neo-Nazi rallies at least twice.
“It’s absurd. It’s 100% wrong that he could have ever liked Hitler,” Marnul said at his gym, where the former world champion bodybuilder began training when he was 15.
Transcripts from a book proposal by George Butler, who directed Pumping Iron, the 1977 bodybuilding documentary that brought Schwarzenegger to mainstream attention, quoted the actor as expressing admiration for Hitler not for what he did, but for rising to power with little formal education, and for his public speaking abilities.
Butler issued a statement on Friday saying the remarks were quoted out of context and that he’d never heard Schwarzenegger utter an anti-Semitic remark.
Schwarzenegger has said he despised Hitler and could not recall ever saying anything in favour of him.
Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, said that if Schwarzenegger did express admiration for Hitler he should apologise. But he added that the actor has worked on the centre’s behalf for years, donating hundreds of thousands of dollars and speaking out in favour of its pro-tolerance programs.
“For the 20 years that I’ve known Arnold, I can say without reservations, he is not an anti-Semite, he is not a supporter of neo-Nazis or racists,” Hier said in a telephone interview on Saturday from Jerusalem.
The Davis campaign said its internal polling showed support and opposition to the recall vote was running even after word of the allegations. The Schwarzenegger camp said its polls showed a slight movement in favour of Schwarzenegger. Before the remarks, polls showed the recall passing and Schwarzenegger leading the candidates to replace Davis.
Davis noted Schwarzenegger has acknowledged mistreatment of women.
“Electing a governor who might have committed a crime is going to distract the state from the work it has to do,” he said. — Sapa-AP
Associated Press writers Beth Fouhy and Seth Hettena contributed to this story.