Fox News Sunday’s Chris Wallace, asked Republican chairman Reince Priebus the one question that Republicans don’t want to answer, and the RNC boss’s non-response could have devastating consequences for Republican candidates.

Video:

Transcript via Fox News Sunday:

CHRIS WALLACE: Chairman, I want to start with that article in the New York Times today. It’s called “Crossing the Line: Trump’s Private Conduct with Women.” They did more than 50 interviews over six weeks and they say they found repeated instances of Trump insulting women and making unwanted advances, even in the workplace.

Chairman Priebus, does that bother you?

REINCE PRIEBUS, CHAIRMAN, REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE: Well, you know, a lot of things bother me, Chris, and obviously I’m the wrong person to be asking that particular question, but, look, we’ve been —

(CROSSTALK)

WALLACE: Wait a minute. Why are you the wrong person? I mean, you are the chairman of the party. This is your nominee and they’re saying that he has mistreated women over the years.

(CROSSTALK)

PRIEBUS: What I would say is, you know, we’ve been working on this primary for over a year, Chris, and I’ve got to tell you, I think that all these stories that come out and they come out every couple weeks, people just don’t care. I think people look at Donald Trump and say — and Hillary Clinton and say, who is going to bring an earthquake to Washington, D.C.?

I think the bigger issue when we make these judgments about people are, you know, whether or not individuals are throwing stones in glass houses and when people are hypocrites, obviously, that’s when these stories have an impact, but I don’t think Donald Trump in his personal life is something that people are looking at and saying, well, I’m surprised that he has had girlfriends in the past. That’s not what people look at Donald Trump for.

So I think the traditional playbook and analysis really don’t apply.

WALLACE: But forgive me, it’s not whether or not he had girlfriends, the question is whether or not he mistreated women, whether he made unwanted advances, whether he humiliated women in the workplace. I don’t understand why you say that people don’t care about that and are you going to look into the allegations?

PRIEBUS: Well, look, I’m not saying people don’t care about it, I’m just saying I think the reason he’s where he is at is that he represents something much different than the traditional analysis of individual candidates.