Las Vegas Review-Journal

How low can GOP senators go?

- Eugene Robinson

If that hearing could possibly have gone worse, please tell me how. Christine Blasey Ford was the soul of credibilit­y, which should be no surprise. She is a PH.D. psychologi­st in the midst of a distinguis­hed career. Her voice was both strong and vulnerable as she recounted the details of the sexual assault she says she suffered at the clumsy, drunken hands of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. She didn’t sound like a partisan Democrat. She sounded like a determined survivor.

Kavanaugh sounded like a man fighting for his life. That was no surprise, either, but his tone was unexpected. He shouted. He wept. He flatly accused Democratic senators on the panel of timing Ford’s allegation as a last-ditch effort to prevent his confirmati­on — a startling allegation from a sitting federal appellate judge, let alone a nominee for the Supreme Court.

The body language of the Republican­s on the panel reflected the bipolar nature of the day. Ford’s compelling testimony slumped their shoulders and furrowed their brows. Kavanaugh’s fiery self-defense seemed to animate them, buck them up, and perhaps rescue his nomination’s chance of approval in committee.

We should have known that unless Ford or Kavanaugh somehow fell apart in the witness chair, the nation would be left with a dilemma. What I didn’t fully realize was how damaging and divisive that dilemma may ultimately prove to be.

Republican­s have the votes — and those on the committee may now have the will — to “plow right through this” all the way to confirmati­on. But if they do, especially following the partisan allegation­s Kavanaugh made against Democrats in the Senate — many Americans may always suspect his decisions are motivated by politics rather than jurisprude­nce.

There is something that could be done: Reopen the FBI background investigat­ion of Kavanaugh and let the nation’s best investigat­ors dig out whatever facts are there to be unearthed. The Senate would then have more of a record on which to base its ultimate decision.

But Kavanaugh, notably in a tense exchange with Sen. Dick Durbin, D-ill., maintained he would welcome any kind of investigat­ion but adamantly refused to say he wanted the FBI probe to be reopened. Republican­s on the committee made clear that they are untroubled by the contradict­ion. To others, it looked as if he has something to hide.

Ford sounded at times not just like an accuser but also like an expert witness. At one point, the Republican­s’ hired-gun interrogat­or, Arizona prosecutor Rachel Mitchell, was asking questions that seemed designed to suggest that perhaps other events in her life were responsibl­e for symptoms of anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder that Ford reported suffering. Ford began her response by noting research that suggests “the etiology of anxiety and PTSD is multifacto­rial.” Mitchell, who is not a PH.D. psychologi­st, wisely decided not to pursue the point further.

Why was Mitchell even there? Because the lily-livered Republican members of the committee — all of them white males — were afraid to question Ford directly, knowing the optics would be awful. If dirty work was necessary, much better to get a woman to do it.

The new paradigm for the #Metoo Era is “believe the woman.” It was bizarre that Senate Republican­s would hardly even speak with the woman.

But after Kavanaugh’s emotional opening and his first few rounds of sparring with Democrats on the committee, Republican­s were emboldened to dispense with Mitchell’s services and weigh in aggressive­ly in Kavanaugh’s support. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. — who, during the break between the star witnesses, referred to Ford as “a nice lady” — broke the dam. Then his colleagues followed, trying to portray the entire affair as an exercise in character assassinat­ion.

The problem is that the afternoon session did not erase Ford’s compelling testimony. She said she was “100 percent” certain that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her one night in 1982. She mentioned the attack, and named the alleged perpetrato­r, years before Kavanaugh was nominated to the Supreme Court. She tried to alert Congress before he was nominated. She has taken, and passed, a polygraph test.

President Donald Trump tweeted his approval of the fighting spirit Kavanaugh displayed. But Trump can be cold-blooded, and while the majority on the Judiciary Committee seemed ready to move full steam ahead, quite a few GOP senators have been withholdin­g judgment, at least publicly. Trump will have to gauge not just whether his nominee has the votes in committee, but also whether he can prevail on the floor.

To the list of an awful day’s victims, add respect for the Senate and the Supreme Court.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., speaks during Thursday’s hearing with Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in Washington. “What you want to do is destroy this guy’s life, hold this seat and hope you win in 2020,” Graham told Democrats at the hearing.
WIN MCNAMEE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., speaks during Thursday’s hearing with Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in Washington. “What you want to do is destroy this guy’s life, hold this seat and hope you win in 2020,” Graham told Democrats at the hearing.

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