The Borneo Post

Bar Associatio­n asks for delay in Kavanaugh vote

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WASHINGTON: The American Bar Associatio­n has called on the Senate Judiciary Committee to delay the confirmati­on of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh so that the FBI can investigat­e the sexual assault accusation­s against him, the Washington Post reported.

Associatio­n President Robert Carlson requested the delay in a letter sent to the committee on Thursday evening, the Post reported, after a day of testimony by university professor Christine Blasey Ford who accused Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her 36 years ago, and by Kavanaugh who denied it.

“The basic principles that unde r s c or e the S enat e ’ s constituti­onal duty of advice and consent on federal judicial nominees require nothing less than a careful examinatio­n of the accusation­s and facts by the FBI,” Carlsonwro­tetoChairm­an Charles Grassley and ranking committee Democrat Dianne Feinstein that, the Post reported.

Kavanaugh, a conservati­ve

The basic principles that underscore the Senate’s constituti­onal duty of advice and consent on federal judicial nominees require nothing less than a careful examinatio­n of the accusation­s and facts by the FBI. Robert Carlson, The American Bar Associatio­n president

federal appeals court judge chosen by President Donald Trump, said he was the victim of ‘grotesque and obvious character assassinat­ion’ orchestrat­ed by senate democrats.

The Judiciary Committee, on which Republican­s hold an 11-10 majority, was to meet yesterday morning and several senators said they expected it to vote then. The full Senate, controlled 51- 49 by Trump’s fellow Republican­s, could vote within days.

Kavanaugh was nominated by Trump and his confirmati­on would cement conservat ive control of the Supreme Court with disputes over abortion rights, immigratio­n, gay rights, voting rights and transgende­r troops possibly heading toward the justices soon.

Ford’s allegation emerged last week and has been followed by other allegation­s. Some democrats have called on Kavanaugh to withdraw in light of the allegation­s and have said an FBI investigat­ion is needed before any Senate confirmati­on vote.

“Each appointmen­t to our nation’s Highest Court (as with all others) is simply too important to rush to a vote,” Carlson wrote.

“Deciding to proceed without conduct ing an add it ional investigat­ion would not only have a lasting impact on the Senate’s reputation, but it will also negatively affect the great trust necessary for the American people to have in the Supreme Court,” he added, the Post reported. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Dozens of protesters against the confirmati­on of Kavanaugh gather outside Schumer’s office on the afternoon that the nation is watching Ford testify against Kavanaugh in New York. — AFP photo
Dozens of protesters against the confirmati­on of Kavanaugh gather outside Schumer’s office on the afternoon that the nation is watching Ford testify against Kavanaugh in New York. — AFP photo

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