This is happening right now in Washington, D.C., where dozens of protestors are taking their message directly to Sen. Susan Collins, (R-ME).
And in Maine, the entire state is going to be talking about this column from Maine's version of Walter Cronkite or Edward R. Murrow, Bill Nemitz. He asks Collins to ponder "why McConnell & Co. seem so comfortable speaking for her," concluding
This is about one woman with a story to tell and another woman who, upon hearing it, will know deep down if it’s the truth. […]
And if she doesn’t believe Ford, she’ll have to explain to the entire country, especially its women, why she sided with the once-17-year-old boy and against the 15-year-old girl.
Watch closely, Senator Collins, and listen carefully.
There’s no middle ground this time.
With as many as three new allegations surfacing overnight and this morning—Deborah Ramirez, the client Michael Avenatti keeps tweeting about, and another being investigated in Montgomery County, Maryland. That's potentially four women who Collins is considering directly, personally betraying. Or she could end this now. She could say "no."
That would be one "no" from a woman Trump would have to listen to.