Mark Shields:

Yes.

Dante Chinni of the Wall Street Journal pointed out this week that, by a margin of 42 percent, 42 percent more college-educated women are voting Democrat over Republican heading into 2018.

I think that's a direct consequence of the two parties, particularly of President Trump, and his — first of all, his position, the "Hollywood Access," something that he apologized for twice and then attempted to deny that he had said on the third time.

But there's no question that there is a reckoning, the — Weinstein, Charlie Rose. I mean, when you see men of that stature and that prominence fall, there's no question that it's real. And I think the warning throughout our society, the lesson is there. I think it's there politically.

As far as Charlottesville, is it still an open wound on race in this country? And none of these cases has the president shown any moral leadership or any ability to heal the wounds. I just come back to the fact that, on the night that he won the presidency in 2012, Barack Obama stood there and he said, we, first of all, speaking of his opponent's father, and the governor of Michigan, and his mother who had been a candidate for the Senate, he said, we salute George Romney and Lenore Romney and their son mitt, because the Romney family's commitment to this country and to public service to give back to America is what we honor here tonight.

Now, Donald Trump insists every — daily, almost hourly, of speaking about the crooked Hillary. He's never extended the open hand of friendship of anything of the sort. And there's no healing. There's no healing. And a president is supposed to be a healer.