Global Times

Protesters rage in US as Kavanaugh confirmed

Dozens arrested on Supreme Court steps

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Two of America’s hallowed institutio­ns, the US Capitol and the Supreme Court, became a nexus of public rage and frustratio­n Saturday as President Donald Trump got his controvers­ial nominee Brett Kavanaugh confirmed onto the high court.

Protesters swarmed Washington DC and rushed the steps of the Supreme Court to bang loudly on its bronze doors around the time Kavanaugh was set to be sworn in inside.

“This is our court. These are our steps. These are our institutio­ns!” said Jessica Campbell Swanson, 35, to AFP just after raising a defiant fist and then coming down from the lap of the large marble Contemplat­ion of Justice statue in front of the Supreme Court.

Hundreds of her compatriot­s chanted and waved antiKavana­ugh placards – one read “This ain’t over” – as dozens of officers pushed them back from the doors and then stood guard.

After a week of deep anxiety in Washington and nationwide, tensions surged about Kavanaugh, who stands accused of sexual misconduct.

Several hundred protesters, mostly women, barged through barricades to lay claim to the front steps of the US Capitol. Dozens were arrested as they and others chanted “Vote them out!” and “No justice, no seat!”

Protesters disrupted the vote itself in the US Senate multiple times before being dragged from the public galleries, yelling “Coward!” at lawmakers who backed Kavanaugh.

When Vice President Mike Pence, who presided over the vote, exited the Senate, he was loudly booed and heckled by onlookers outside until he ducked into his limousine.

The confirmati­on of Kavanaugh has come in the midst of a MeToo movement that has put sexual assault squarely in a cultural cross-hairs.

And it has prompted several assault survivors to take up the protest banner.

“I am here because President Trump mocked sexual assault victims,” said North Carolina native Kara Harrington, 50, as she held a sign that read “Shame,” and stood with her daughter and husband in front of a police cordon on the court steps.

“It unleashed something inside me. I was assaulted when I was younger and I didn’t tell anybody,” she added.

But she also spoke of the country’s bitter divisions, and how American politician­s and the Trump administra­tion have done little to douse the flames.

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