Hartford Courant

Trump Doubts Judge’s Accuser

GOP Senators Issue Ultimatum On Hearing

- By JOHN WAGNER, SEUNG MIN KIM and SEAN SULLIVAN Washington Post

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump cast doubt Friday on the credibilit­y of the woman who has accused Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her when they were teenagers, escalating the standoff over the Supreme Court nomination, as Republican senators issued an ultimatum to force her to decide whether she will tell her story at a public hearing next week.

By attacking California professor Christine Blasey Ford, Trump abandoned the self-restraint he had showed for days and pushed Kavanaugh’s nomination deeper into turmoil. Democrats, key Republican senators and advocates for victims of sexual assault swiftly rebuked the president.

Meanwhile, talks between Ford’s attorney, Debra Katz, and Republican senators were deadlocked late Friday after Katz asked aides to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, for one more day to respond to his offer for Ford and

Kavanaugh to testify before his panel on Wednesday.

Katz said committee Republican­s’ arbitrary deadlines and ultimatums had created stress and anxiety for Ford, who met with the FBI on Friday about the death threats she had received.

“Your cavalier treatment of a sexual assault survivor who has been doing her best to cooperate with the Committee is completely inappropri­ate,” Katz said.

Grassley had warned that he would move ahead with plans for his committee to vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination on Monday if his offer was rejected or ignored. Katz replied to Grassley aides in a letter decrying the “aggressive and artificial deadlines.” Grassley did not immediatel­y respond.

The late-night developmen­ts added new turbulence to a nomination that Republican­s have sought to steady in their public comments. “In the very near future, Judge Kavanaugh will be on the United States Supreme Court,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told conservati­ve activists Friday.

Plenty of uncertaint­y loomed over a nominee, who could shift the court further right for a generation - and whether Trump’s broadside would influence on-the-fence Republican senators with the power to torpedo Kavanaugh’s nomination.

“I have no doubt that, if the attack on Dr. Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediatel­y filed with local Law Enforcemen­t Authoritie­s by either her or her loving parents,” Trump said in a Friday tweet, his first to mention Kavanaugh’s accuser by name.

Ford said in an interview with The Washington Post published Sunday that she told no one of the incident in any detail until 2012, when she was in couples therapy with her husband. By Friday afternoon, the hashtag #WhyIDidntR­eport was trending on Twitter, with thousands of people coming forward to explain their hesitation to contact authoritie­s.

Also on Friday, Trump tweeted: “Let her testify, or not, and TAKE THE VOTE!”

“He was born for the U.S Supreme Court. He was born for it. And it’s going to happen. It’s going to happen,” Trump said at a rally in Missouri on Friday night.

In a departure from his usual instincts to go on the attack, Trump had remained relatively restrained in his public remarks about Ford’s accusation. Until Friday, the president mostly defended Kavanaugh’s character while stressing that Ford should be allowed to be heard.

His latest comments triggered a widespread backlash from Democratic lawmakers and a few moderate Republican senators who have not declared whether they will support Kavanaugh. Republican­s hold a slim 51-to-49 advantage in the Senate.

“I was appalled by the president’s tweet,” said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine. “First of all, we know that allegation­s of sexual assault — I’m not saying that’s what happened in this case — but we know allegation­s of sexual assault are one of the most unreported crimes that exist. So I thought that the president’s tweet was completely inappropri­ate and wrong.”

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., sounded a similar note, saying, “I thought that was incredibly insensitiv­e.”

Democrats were even more critical. Sen. Maggie Hassan, N.H., tweeted: “The President’s comments are one of the reasons why it is so hard for survivors of sexual assault [to] come forward.”

Ford met with the FBI on Friday afternoon as part of its investigat­ion of death threats she has received since agreeing to go public with her allegation­s, according to Katz. Accordingl­y, Katz told Grassley’s aides in her letter, “we would need until tomorrow to confer with her and to be able to provide you with a well-considered response.”

Amid the firestorm over Trump’s tweet, McConnell predicted that Kavanaugh would soon be confirmed, calling him a “stunningly successful individual.”

“You’ve watched the fight. You’ve watched the tactics,” McConnell said during remarks at the Values Voter Summit, an annual gathering of social conservati­ves, in Washington. “Here’s what I want to tell you: In the very near future, Judge Kavanaugh will be on the United States Supreme Court.”

In a letter from Grassley’s staff to Ford’s lawyers, Senate Republican­s said they were willing to accommodat­e several of the professor’s requests for testifying before the committee. Those included ensuring that she had proper security and breaks during her testimony, that all senators get equal time to speak, that press access be limited, and that just one camera be allowed in the hearing room. She also asked that Kavanaugh not be present as she speaks.

But Republican­s made clear they would not agree to some of her other requests. Among those were that Kavanaugh testify first and that the committee subpoena Mark Judge — a Kavanaugh friend who Ford says was present during the alleged incident — and call other potential witnesses to the hearing. The Republican­s also offered a Wednesday hearing, rather than Thursday as Ford had asked for, and they wanted to reserve the option of having female staff attorneys on the committee do the questionin­g.

“We want to hear Dr. Ford’s testimony and are prepared to accommodat­e many of your demands, including further delaying a hearing that is currently scheduled for Monday,” Grassley said. “We are unwilling to accommodat­e your unreasonab­le demands. Outside counsel may not dictate the terms under which committee business will be conducted.”

Some Republican senators also feel strongly that an outside counsel should handle the questionin­g, one GOP official said — although bringing in outside lawyers is something Ford does not want because it would make her less comfortabl­e, according to her attorneys.

Over the span of three hours Friday, Trump tweeted several times about Ford and Kavanaugh from Las Vegas, where he held a political rally Thursday night and did a couple of events Friday.

In one tweet, he contended that Kavanaugh is under assault by “radical left wing politician­s” who are not interested in the truth about the allegation but instead “just want to destroy and delay.”

The president also took aim at “radical left lawyers” who he said are seeking to get the FBI to investigat­e Ford’s allegation­s, saying: “Why didn’t someone call the FBI 36 years ago?”

Ford told The Post in the interview published Sunday that Kavanaugh drunkenly pinned her to a bed, groped her and put his hand over her mouth to stifle her screams at a house party in the early 1980s. The alleged incident occurred while both were students at separate schools in Maryland. Kavanaugh has firmly denied the accusation.

Ford said she told no one at the time. She was terrified, she said, that she would be in trouble if her parents realized she had been at a party where teenagers were drinking, and she worried they might figure it out even if she did not tell them.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA | ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS HOLD signs urging U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, to vote “no” on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, accused of sexually assaulting a woman in the ‘80s.
ELISE AMENDOLA | ASSOCIATED PRESS DEMONSTRAT­ORS HOLD signs urging U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, to vote “no” on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, accused of sexually assaulting a woman in the ‘80s.

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