Katie Hill Joins Women Everywhere Using #WeBelieveChristine as a Rallying Cry

"We must stand together," the congressional candidate writes.

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In the wake of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford's allegation that Brett Kavanaugh tried to sexually assault her as a teenager—a story that has delayed his confirmation to the Supreme Court and sent her life spiraling—candidates up for election or re-election in the midterms have been forced to take a stand. Prolific Democratic candidate Ayanna Pressley declared, "I believe her," and other would-be congressional politicians like Katie Hill are using the hashtag #IBelieveChristine to share videos and messages of support.

Senate Democrats, meanwhile, are largely in favor of a FBI investigation into what happened the night that Dr. Ford says a young Kavanaugh allegedly groped her and tried to remove her clothing—claims Kavanaugh has adamantly denied. Their colleagues on the other side of the aisle are more reluctant to take a side, with some going so far as to say Dr. Ford got "mixed up," and others merely trying to push forward Kavanaugh's confirmation vote.

But perhaps the most persuasive voices are coming from the public figures, celebrities, candidates, and everyday citizens alike who choose to believe Dr. Ford as a matter of principle—women very rarely lie about sexual assault, and it's difficult to believe that Dr. Ford would torpedo her life and career to do so—who are chiming in.

Celebrities like Julianne Moore and America Ferrera joined a host of others to make a video they tagged #DearProfessorFord on Twitter, pledging, "We want you to know that you are not alone. You are a survivor. Millions of us have your back."

Others are making single-person videos—like Katie Hill, running for Congress in California, who looked straight at the camera to pledge: "I stand with you, and so many of us stand with you." She adds: "We can only imagine how hard this is for you."

And on Friday, after President Trump tweeted a full-throated defense of Kavanaugh that amounted to "If it happened, why didn't she report it?", survivors and allies leapt to defend Dr. Ford with the hashtag #WhyIDidntReport. Individuals explained that they had had no legal recourse, that they suspected they wouldn't be believed, that they knew they couldn't be a "perfect victim," that even if they were believed, they'd be blamed and marginalized. That they were just trying to survive.

Frankly, in the current climate, it shouldn't be difficult to understand why individuals are reluctant to report sexual assault. Dr. Ford has rightfully been called a "patriot" for sacrificing her privacy and personal life to go public with her claims about Kavanaugh—but she's also been called names that I'm not going to write here, received death threats so disturbing she's had to contact the FBI, and been publicly disparaged by the president. She and her family were forced to relocate after her home address was made public—not to mention, she's had to contend with numerous politicians and commentators telling her that her alleged assault never happened at all.

But as loud as Dr. Ford's detractors have been, her allies have arguably been louder.

Several, like Hill, are urging fellow supporters to now share their own video message to Dr.Ford with the hashtag #IBelieveChristine. Here's how.

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Jenny Hollander
Digital Director

Jenny is the Digital Director at Marie Claire. A graduate of Leeds University, and a native of London, she moved to New York in 2012 to attend the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She was the first intern at Bustle when it launched in 2013 and spent five years building out its news and politics department. In 2018 she joined Marie Claire, where she held the roles of Deputy Digital Editor and Director of Content Strategy before becoming Digital Director. Working closely with Marie Claire's exceptional editorial, audience, commercial, and e-commerce teams, Jenny oversees the brand's digital arm, with an emphasis on driving readership. When she isn't editing or knee-deep in Google Analytics, you can find Jenny writing about television, celebrities, her lifelong hate of umbrellas, or (most likely) her dog, Captain. In her spare time, she writes fiction: her first novel, the thriller EVERYONE WHO CAN FORGIVE ME IS DEAD, was published with Minotaur Books (UK) and Little, Brown (US) in February 2024 and became a USA Today bestseller. She has also written extensively about developmental coordination disorder, or dyspraxia, which she was diagnosed with when she was nine.