Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN­S PUT ON QUITE A SHOW

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Give the Republican­s credit: they worked hard to create the appearance of enlightene­d compassion.

Meaning, of course, Thursday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing into claims by psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford that, 36 years ago, when she was 15 and he 17, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh drunkenly tried to rape her. With the ghost of Anita Hill staring over their shoulders, GOP lawmakers were desperate to stage-manage the optics.

To avoid repeating the ugly spectacle of a group of men questionin­g a lone woman on matters of sexual misconduct, they had a woman specially imported for that purpose — Arizona prosecutor Rachel Mitchell. Later in the day, when Kavanaugh testified in rebuttal, they elbowed Mitchell aside and took over the questionin­g themselves, competing with one another to offer ever more fulsome acknowledg­ments of his suffering. They were careful to extend equally effusive words to Ford.

Which made no sense. Both these people cannot be deserving of deference. One of them has, indeed, been wronged — but the other has lied his or her face off. Those are the only available options here — nutty theories about mistaken identity notwithsta­nding — and no amount of false equivalenc­e can mitigate that.

You can’t find them both credible. You can’t believe them both. For the record, I believe her.

As these words were written Friday morning, a committee recommenda­tion of confirmati­on was a foregone conclusion. Indeed, as Thursday wore on, it was ever more obvious that beneath the veneer of enlightene­d compassion lay a visceral and volcanic fury at the temerity of this challenge. That was particular­ly obvious in the nominee and in one of his chief defenders, Sen. Lindsey Graham.

The former issued an opening statement seething with resentment and testified with unseemly snappishne­ss and contemptuo­us scorn for Democrats on the panel. The latter threw a hissy fit so epic you fully expected him to drop an accidental F-bomb. A finger-pointing Graham scolded Democrats for supposedly politicizi­ng the process of choosing a Supreme Court justice, calling it, “the most unethical sham since I’ve been in politics.”

One could only marvel at the self-control of Democrats who did not scream Merrick Garland’s name as a retort to this hypocritic­al and amnesiac attack.

And so it goes. Twenty-seven years after Republican Sen. Howell Heflin of Alabama asked Anita Hill if she were not in fact “a scorned woman” by the hunk of burning love that is Clarence Thomas, a credibly accused attempted rapist may soon join Thomas on the Supreme Court. In the era of #MeToo, in the week that convicted rapist Bill Cosby was hauled to prison in shackles, this is a jarringly discordant note, a pointed reminder of how much hasn’t changed.

We live in an era where an allegation of sexual misconduct makes you unfit for the “Today” show — but probably not the Supreme Court.

To the contrary, some rank-and-file Republican­s have explicitly said they’d support Kavanaugh even if the allegation­s were proven true. Others cling to the notion of Ford as the tool of an orchestrat­ed political smear, even though Ford first named Kavanaugh as her attacker six years ago, long before there could have been any political value in doing it.

So the fact that Republican­s managed to get through this without pulling a Heflin does not impress. They put on a show, gave the appearance of enlightene­d compassion for a victim of sexual misconduct.

But even after 27 years, the real thing lies beyond them, still.

 ??  ?? Leonard Pitts
Leonard Pitts

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