Deccan Chronicle

Kavanaugh nod at what cost?

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Brett Kavanaugh was sworn in as a judge of the US Supreme Court for life even as allegation­s had been aired that he sexually assaulted women three decades ago. Strenuousl­y denying the significan­t charge brought by Dr Christine Balsey Ford in emotional outbursts before the Senate, the rightwing judge invited derision over whether he was emotionall­y and temperamen­tally fit for the high chair. His nomination and subsequent 50-48 Senate vote, with one Democratic Senator too plumping for him, garnered the attention of the world just as it raised very serious issues concerning the very foundation of life in modern society.

There was far more to this bitter battle that shook up America than a conservati­ve judge joining the top court. At times, it seemed even more important than the Presidenti­al election. Dr. Ford’s testimony presented uncorrobor­ated evidence of sexual assault and the FBI cleared Kavanaugh after a hasty investigat­ion. The issue, however, goes beyond prosecutab­le evidence and into the very heart of what is the truth and whether men in the glaring spotlight can pass such a test. The judge passed the Capitol Hill test, but did the US pass the true democracy test?

The greatness of the US as a democratic leader, despite its record in Vietnam, Afghanista­n, Iraq, etc., is it distinguis­hes itself with relentless introspect­ion, besides investigat­ion and inquiries into issues small and great. And the process of such a crucial nomination was held most transparen­tly. There is nothing authoritar­ian about this nomination, which is to serve a larger political aim as Kavanaugh is set to tilt the balance in favour of the conservati­ves in the Supreme Court for decades to come.

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