Los Angeles Times

Fill the vacancy on the court

-

Re “Trump, GOP stand behind Kavanaugh,” Sept. 25

Though we may never know what really happened between Judge Brett Kavanaugh and his accusers, we need to fill a very important vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court. If Kavanaugh is unsuitable to fill the seat to which President Trump nominated him, then find someone else — but we need the process to go forward and not be stymied indefinite­ly.

There is no human being on Earth who hasn’t done something regrettabl­e in his life. By scrutinizi­ng the behavior of court nominees going all the way back to their adolescenc­e, we may never be able to confirm anyone.

Let Kavanaugh’s accusers give their testimony, allow the judge to defend himself, and then put his confirmati­on up for a vote. Let American leaders, as the representa­tives of their constituen­ts, decide on whether or not he is fit to be a Supreme Court justice. Michael Pravica

Henderson, Nev.

As a student many years ago, I went to a keg party with a 17- or 18-yearold boy I met earlier in the day at Michigan State University. I don’t drink beer so I was sober; he was drunk.

The police raided the party, and my new friend and I along with another couple jumped in his car and headed to his apartment for pizza. When the other couple left for a moment, my new friend jumped me and pinned me to the bed. He was so drunk that I was able to fight him off and race back to the dorm.

I told my mother about this; she asked if I was hurt

and I told her no. Then, she said, “It’s a good lesson — never go to a drunk man’s apartment.”

If this boy became an upstanding citizen, raised a family and was respected by men and women alike, I would vote for him for president. What teenagers do when drunk is sometimes wrong, but as long as no one was hurt it should not ruin a life. Ruth Miller

Beverly Hills

Avoiding unnecessar­y harm to anyone is a worthy goal, but more is involved here. One is made a Supreme Court justice by appointmen­t to a lifetime position; to be worthy of that, one must be above reproach.

Here the fairness required is fairness to the nation and its welfare; all else pales in comparison.

During Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee, some members tried to document plausible charges that the nominee may have lied about his work as a White House lawyer during the George W. Bush administra­tion. But the committee’s GOP majority prevented that, saying the documents sought were privileged.

Absent any willingnes­s by Republican­s to waive privilege, the nomination should be withdrawn. John C. Nangle

Palm Springs

Kavanaugh deserves fairness, and he has called for a fair process. Meanwhile his backers, including Trump, label the accusers’ charges as politicall­y motivated when they cannot in any manner know that label to be true.

Fair could be for someone to keep his current job and be lucky and happy to have it.

Certainly we have other candidates for the Supreme Court — how about Judge Merrick Garland? Should he get a “fair process”? Scott Hamre

Cherry Valley, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States