The Freeman

US senators to vote on Brett Kavanaugh

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WASHINGTON — The Senate is poised to take a crucial vote Friday on whether to advance Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court as key Republican senators remain undecided amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct and intense protests that have divided the nation.

The 53-year-old judge made what were in effect closing arguments by acknowledg­ing that he became “very emotional” when forcefully denying the allegation­s at a Judiciary Committee hearing last week. “I said a few things I should not have said,” he wrote in an op-ed published Thursday evening. But he said he remains the same “hardworkin­g, even-keeled” person he has always been. “Going forward, you can count on me,” he wrote in The Wall Street Journal.

The op-ed, as well as a late boost from President Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Minnesota, appeared aimed at winning over the three wavering senators from the slim GOP majority — Susan Collins of Maine, Jeff Flake of Arizona and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — and one Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who has yet to announce his position.

Ahead of Friday’s voting, Republican­s emerged confident that an FBI investigat­ion into the allegation­s unearthed no new corroborat­ing details, they said. But a level of uncertaint­y lingered as Collins and Flake spent hours Thursday pouring over confidenti­al FBI documents in the secure basement briefing room long after others had left seemingly satisfied with the findings. Even without locking in support, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pushed ahead with trying to move Trump’s nominee forward in what would be an election year win for his party. The Republican leader has little room for error with his party’s slim 51-49 hold on the Senate, even if Vice President Mike Pence is called in to break a tie. A final vote is expected Saturday.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., with actress and comedian Amy Schumer, right, and actress model Emily Ratajkowsk­i, center, speaks at a rally against Supreme Court nomineeBre­tt Kavanaugh at the Supreme Court in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., with actress and comedian Amy Schumer, right, and actress model Emily Ratajkowsk­i, center, speaks at a rally against Supreme Court nomineeBre­tt Kavanaugh at the Supreme Court in Washington.

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