Kavanaugh, Ford give stirring testimony. Now senators must decide
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh offered a resounding defense of his character on Thursday as he angrily denied the charges of sexual assault made against him in equally compelling testimony earlier that day by Christine Blasey Ford.
Ford’s harrowing account of an alleged assault against her by Kavanaugh when they were in high school — and his vehement and emotional denial — created a roller coaster day on Capitol Hill.
{mosads}Kavanaugh’s confirmation looked doomed after Ford’s testimony, and GOP senators appeared ashen-faced at times when she asserted that she had vivid recollections of Kavanaugh covering her mouth to stifle her screams at a summer party.
But Kavanaugh’s emotional performance seemed to bolster the resolve of many Republicans, suggesting his confirmation could still very well be won in a Senate controlled by the GOP with a narrow 51-49 margin.
President Trump tweeted his approval of Kavanaugh shortly after his testimony ended.
“Judge Kavanaugh showed America exactly why I nominated him. His testimony was powerful, honest, and riveting. Democrats’ search and destroy strategy is disgraceful and this process has been a total sham and effort to delay, obstruct, and resist. The Senate must vote!” the president wrote on Twitter.
Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), a senior member of the panel, said Kavanaugh helped save his nomination by responding forcefully to questions from Democratic senators and choking up at times when remembering the lifelong female friends who have stood by his defense.
“I think he’s saving it himself, he’s really good,” Hatch said. “He came across very, very well.”
“It was what someone who’s falsely accused ought to be like,” he added.
But the result after nearly eight hours of testimony was far from a slam-dunk win for Kavanaugh.
“There is likely to be as much doubt as certainty leaving this room today,” said Sen. Jeff Flake (Ariz.), the only undecided Republican on the committee.
He, along with centrist Sens. Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and retiring Sen. Bob Corker (Tenn.), are the four Republican swing votes who are expected to decide the nomination.
Kavanaugh’s passionate denials stood in contrast to his interview earlier in the week with Fox News Channel’s Martha MacCallum, which was criticized as robotic and lacking emotion.
Kavanaugh went on offense right away and blasted senators for letting him twist in the wind for days after Ford’s allegations, in which she says he attempted to sexually assault her, first surfaced.
He blasted the confirmation proceedings as “a national disgrace” and accused senators of letting the chamber’s constitutional role of “advice and consent” become twisted into a mission to “search and destroy.”
But Ford appeared to be just as compelling as she testified before the committee for nearly four hours.
When Sen. Dianne Feinstein (Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the committee, asked if there was any chance Ford may have mistaken someone else for Kavanaugh, she responded “absolutely not.”
Asked how she could be sure of her memory of Kavanaugh’s alleged attack, Ford responded “The same way that I’m sure I’m talking to you right now — basic memory functions.”
Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), the chairman of the Appropriations Committee, acknowledged that “I thought she looked credible” and Cornyn told reporters said he “found no reason to find her not credible.”
The outside counsel that Republicans hired to ask Ford questions, Rachel Mitchell, a sex crimes prosecutor with the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, was careful in her handling of the witness and didn’t aggressively attack her credibility.
Fox News host Chris Wallace called the start of the hearing “a disaster” for Republicans.
Republican leaders at lunchtime demurred on the question of whether Kavanaugh would have enough votes to pass when he comes to the floor next week.
Asked if he thought Kavanaugh would secure confirmation next week, Senate Republican Conference Chairman John Thune (S.D.) told reporters, “Look, I think this ought to come down to evidence.”
“It ought to come down to facts, and I don’t know that there’s anything in terms of facts or evidence that have changed,” he said.
After hearing Kavanaugh’s side of the story, Thune told reporters that Ford’s testimony had not upheld the burden of proof.
“The question of whether or not is was him, there just isn’t the evidence to support that,” Thune said of Ford’s accusation against Kavanaugh. “The burden of proof had to be reached and I don’t think they reached that burden.”
But the momentum began to swing back to Kavanaugh’s side after his wife led him by the hand into the hearing room to dispute Ford’s charges.
The impact of his testimony had a perceptible effect on the faces of Republican senators who listened to him intently with frowns and furrowed brows.
Cornyn’s eyes appeared to mist up as Kavanaugh choked up talking about female friends who have stood by him in recent days.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) exhaled deeply and raised his eyebrows with empathy after the nominee finished his opening statement.
Republicans said Kavanaugh’s performance was strong enough to go ahead with a committee vote Friday, which would set him up for a final confirmation vote on the Senate floor Tuesday.
Asked if Kavanaugh would get confirmed, Hatch said, “Oh yeah. It may be a party-line vote but he’ll get confirmed.”
A Senate Republican aide said the committee meeting to vote on Kavanaugh is still scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Friday.
-Updated 7:53 p.m.
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