As far as I know, Bill Clinton, unlike U.S. Senate candidate Todd Akin, has never misspoken on the subject of rape. In fact, he is somewhat of an authority on the subject.

Clinton knows just what a woman who has been raped should do. As he told Juanita Broaddrick in that Little Rock hotel room some years back, "You better get some ice on that."

Broaddrick was not alone in being sexually abused by Clinton. Indeed, in the Ken Starr investigation, Broaddrick emerged as "Jane Doe No. 5."

Broaddrick was likely not unique in being raped by Clinton either. In his book, "Uncovering Clinton: A Reporter's Story," Michael Isikoff relates how Clinton, then Arkansas governor, had sex with former Miss America Elizabeth Ward Gracen.

"It was rough sex," Isikoff writes, "Clinton got so carried away that he bit her lip, Gracen later told friends. But it was consensual."

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Isikoff missed the lip-biting connection. He also failed to acknowledge that at least one of Gracen's friends, Judy Stokes, had told the Paula Jones legal team that the sex was not consensual at all.

"Do you believe Clinton raped her?" investigator Rick Lambert asked her. "Absolutely," Stokes replied. "He forced her to have sex. What do you call that?"

I cite the Gracen story because it helps substantiate the story Broaddrick told Lisa Myers on NBC's "Dateline" in 1999.

Broaddrick: "And he came around me and sort of put his arm over my shoulder to point to this little building and he said he was real interested if he became governor to restore that little building and then all of a sudden, he turned me around and started kissing me. And that was a real shock."

Myers: "What did you do?"

Broaddrick: "I first pushed him away and just told him 'No, please don't do that,' and I forget, it's been 21 years, Lisa, and I forget exactly what he was saying. It seems like he was making statements that would relate to 'Did you not know why I was coming up here?' and I told him at the time, I said, 'I'm married, and I have other things going on in my life, and this is something that I'm not interested in.'"

Myers: "Had you, that morning, or any other time, given him any reason to believe you might be receptive?"

Broaddrick: "No. None. None whatsoever."

Myers: "Then what happens?"

Broaddrick: "Then he tries to kiss me again. And the second time he tries to kiss me he starts biting my lip (she cries). Just a minute ... He starts to, um, bite on my top lip and I tried to pull away from him. (crying) And then he forces me down on the bed. And I just was very frightened, and I tried to get away from him and I told him 'No,' that I didn't want this to happen (crying) but he wouldn't listen to me."

Myers: "Did you resist, did you tell him to stop?"

Broaddrick: "Yes, I told him 'Please don't.' He was such a different person at that moment, he was just a vicious awful person."

Myers: "You said there was a point at which you stopped resisting?"

Broaddrick: "Yeah."

Myers: "Why?"

Broaddrick: "It was a real panicky, panicky situation. I was even to the point where I was getting very noisy, you know, yelling to 'Please stop.' And that's when he pressed down on my right shoulder and he would bite my lip."

[See a related video, Juanita Broaddrick's interview with Fox's Sean Hannity.]

Hillary Clinton has a rape problem, too. From the beginning of Bill's career, she has been busy suppressing "bimbo eruptions," which is a deceptive way of saying she has been silencing women like Broaddrick and Gracen.

The media have been enabling both of them. Allow me to share a nugget from Bill and Hillary's memorably dishonest "60 Minutes" appearance in late January 1992, the one that would save his candidacy and help launch the perversely labeled "Republican War on Women."

Steve Kroft:[Gennifer Flowers] is alleging and has described in some detail in the supermarket tabloid what she calls a 12-year affair with you.

Bill Clinton: That allegation is false.

Hillary Clinton: … Bill talked to this woman every time she called, distraught, saying her life was going to be ruined, and he'd get off the phone and tell me that she said sort of wacky things, which we thought were attributable to the fact that she was terrified.

Bill Clinton: It was only when money came out, when the tabloid went down there offering people money to say that they had been involved with me, that she changed her story. There's a recession on.

A master politician, even in this moment of deepest political peril, candidate Clinton remembered to remind the American people "there is a recession on." For the record, Clinton would admit the affair with Flowers under oath but lie about the details. Perjury, rape, no big deal!

While Todd Akin is stewing in the woodshed, Bill Clinton is preparing to speak at the Democratic National Convention, and the women most offended by Akin's dumb remarks will be queuing up to cheer Clinton on. Yes, it is a mental disorder.

Get the book so hot it was stolen from its author – Kathleen Willey's "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton"

Related column:

Republicans hang Akin out to dry

Related story:

Limbaugh rushes to Akin's defense

Should Republican Todd Akin withdraw from the U.S. Senate race? Yes, what he said is absurd, and we don't need his kind in the Senate

Yes, he's become a liability to the entire Republican effort

Yes, he's obviously a misogynist and a dope

Yes, the Republicans desperately need to take the Senate, and his presence puts that in jeopardy

Yes, America can't have radical leaders like Akin in the Senate

No, I hope he stays so Claire McCaskill coasts to victory

No, how many mea culpas does somebody have to give for one mistake?

No, Democrats and mainstream media made a mountain out of a mole hill

No, with serial sexual predator Bill Clinton keynoting the Dem convention, why destroy Akin for a slip of the tongue?

No, the real problem Democrats have with Akin is his strong pro-life stand

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