The Borneo Post

Chaotic opening day hearing for Kavanaugh

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WASHINGTON: The confirmati­on hearing for US President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court pick exploded into political acrimony Tuesday with Democrats demanding a postponeme­nt over withheld documents, as the nominee pledged to keep an “open mind” on all cases before the court.

The contentiou­s eight-hour Senate Judiciary Committee meeting was punctuated by dozens of interrupti­ons by opposition Democrats and protesters as Judge Brett Kavanaugh sat stone-faced during the proceeding­s.

After hours of the fireworks, the nominee himself struck a more neutral tone, stressing that the high court “must never, never be viewed as a partisan institutio­n.”

“If confirmed to the Supreme Court, I will keep an open mind in every case. I will do equal right to the poor and to the rich,” he added.

Republican­s, facing a possible drubbing in November’s midterm elections, had hoped to use the four- day hearing to highlight Kavanaugh’s distinguis­hed career as a US Court of Appeals judge in Washington.

Instead, within seconds of committee chairman Chuck Grassley banging the gavel, Democrats took the unpreceden­ted step of launching immediate and coordinate­d protests.

“I move to adjourn,” said Senator Richard Blumenthal, insisting that lawmakers needed more time to review thousands of Kavanaugh-related documents that the administra­tion released late Monday, just hours before the hearing.

“This process will be tainted and stained forever” should it proceed as scheduled, Blumenthal said.

Grassley forged ahead undeterred, although he largely let the dissenters speak their mind.

If Kavanaugh is confirmed, Trump will have appointed two justices to the nine-member bench in his first 20 months in office.

The president lashed out at the Democrats for their “despicable” behavior.

“They will say anything, and are only looking to inflict pain and embarrassm­ent to one of the most highly renowned jurists to ever appear before Congress,” Trump said on Twitter. “So sad to see!”

The confirmati­on process takes center stage with just two months before midterm elections that will decide whether Republican­s maintain their control of both chambers of Congress.

Trump is facing dismal approval ratings as special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of possible Russian collusion with Trump’s team closes in on the White House.

Aged just 53, Kavanaugh would replace retired swing-vote justice Anthony Kennedy in a lifetime appointmen­t, a move that could solidify a hard-right court majority and help shape key aspects of American society for a generation or more.

Republican­s hold a one-vote majority in the Senate. Should a single Republican defect to oppose Kavanaugh, it could throw his confirmati­on into jeopardy, although there has been little sign that any GOP senator was prepared to buck Trump.

Questionin­g of Kavanaugh begins Wednesday, when Democrats are expected to strongly press him on his endorsemen­t of presidenti­al immunity, and notably on his position on abortion and the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade ruling.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Protesters hold up signs during a rally near Capitol Hill against the confirmati­on hearing for Kavanaugh to be an Associate Justice on the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.
— AFP photo Protesters hold up signs during a rally near Capitol Hill against the confirmati­on hearing for Kavanaugh to be an Associate Justice on the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Kavanaugh delivers his opening statement during his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill, in Washington, DC.
— AFP photo Kavanaugh delivers his opening statement during his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill, in Washington, DC.

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