The Sunday Guardian

U.S. Senate headS to final vote on KavanaUgh Sc nomination

Amid tighter-than-usual security, hundreds of protesters against Kavanaugh assembled on the grounds of the Capitol and at the Supreme Court.

- REUTERS

Brett Kavanaugh, the embattled U. S. Supreme Court nominee put forward by President Donald Trump, was poised to win Senate confirmati­on on Saturday, weathering sexual misconduct accusation­s and criticism of his character and temperamen­t.

After weeks of intense debate that has gripped the nation, the conservati­ve appeals court judge on Friday won vows of support from two centrist senators, leaving no clear path in the Senate for Kavanaugh’s opponents to block him.

A final confirmati­on vote was set for around 3: 30 p.m. (1930 GMT) on Saturday.

Amid tighter-than-usual security, hundreds of protesters against Kavanaugh assembled on the grounds of the Capitol and at the Supreme Court. They chanted, “Vote them out! Vote them out!” and carried signs including “I am a survivor, not a troublemak­er!”

A townhouse near the Washington residence of Republican Senator Susan Collins flew the flag of her home state Maine upside down to protest her backing of Kavanaugh.

If they approve Kavanaugh as looks likely, senators would give Trump a clear win in his drive to cement conservati­ve dominance of the high court, a bitter outcome for Democrats who could not get their own liberal nominee confirmed due to Republican delaying tactics in 2016.

With divisive cases on abortion rights, immigratio­n, transgende­r rights and business regulation headed for the court, Kavanaugh likely would give conserva- tives the upper hand.

His confirmati­on would also allow Trump to hit the campaign trail ahead of the Nov. 6 congressio­nal elections bragging that he has kept his 2016 promise to mold a more conservati­ve American judiciary.

Capping a tense day on Friday, Collins of Maine declared on the Senate floor, “I will vote to confirm Judge Kavanaugh.”

She praised his judicial re- cord and argued there was no corroborat­ion of a sexual assault accusation made against him by psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford. Two other women also accused Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct decades ago. Kavanaugh has denied all the allegation­s.

One of those women, Debbie Ramirez, a classmate of Kavanaugh’s at Yale University in the 1980s, issued a statement on Saturday saying that as she watched the Senate debate.

“I feel like I’m right back at Yale where half the room is laughing and looking the other way. Only this time, instead of drunk college kids, it is U.S. senators who are deliberate­ly ignoring his behavior,” she said.

Moments after Collins pledged to back Kavanaugh, Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, who is in a tough race for re-election in West Virginia where Trump is popular, also declared his support, leaving little doubt of a Republican victory.

Senators then endured a rare all-night session to satisfy the requiremen­t of 30 hours of debate following Friday’s vote.

As the debate entered its final hours, the divisions between Republican­s and Democrats festered.

Republican Senator Deb Fischer described Kavanaugh as “one of the most thoughtful, preeminent judges in our nation.” The sexual assault allegation­s, Fischer said, led the Senate confirmati­on process into “a shameful spectacle and a disservice to everyone involved,” adding that there was no evidence Kavanaugh was the perpetrato­r.

Democratic Senator Edward Markey countered, saying Kavanaugh has been a “rubber stamp for a far right-wing agenda.” Referring to the judge’s sworn response to Ford’s testimony, Markey said, “We heard anger. We heard belligeren­ce. We heard evasivenes­s. We heard disrespect.”

Senate Republican­s, except for Lisa Murkowski, stood by Kavanaugh in a move that could resonate, particular­ly with women voters, in the midterm elections to determine control of the Senate and House of Representa­tives.

Even before the sexual assault charges surfaced, Democrats in the Republican-controlled Senate were fighting hard to stop Kavanaugh, saying his conservati­ve judicial philosophy could result in rolling back abortion rights, gay rights and protection­s for immigrants. They also challenged the veracity of some of his Judiciary Committee testimony.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Rescue workers and a soldier remove a victim of last week’s earthquake in the Balaroa neighbourh­ood in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia on Saturday.
REUTERS Rescue workers and a soldier remove a victim of last week’s earthquake in the Balaroa neighbourh­ood in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia on Saturday.
 ??  ?? Brett Kavanaugh
Brett Kavanaugh

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