Orlando Sentinel

Kavanaugh: ‘I’m not going anywhere’

President Trump leads aggressive GOP drive to save nominee

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Republican­s mounted a combative, coordinate­d drive Monday to salvage Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination as they fought to keep a second woman’s allegation of sexual misconduct from derailing his confirmati­on.

President Donald Trump leapt to Kavanaugh’s defense; the Senate’s top Republican accused Democrats of a “smear campaign,” and an emotional Kavanaugh declared, “I’m not going anywhere.”

In the run-up to an appearance by Kavanaugh and his main accuser at a Senate hearing, the Republican­s embraced their newly aggressive stance with his nomination dangling precarious­ly. The similar tones and wording they used suggested a concerted effort to undermine the women’s claims, portray an image of unity among GOP senators and press ahead to a confirmati­on vote.

Trump called the accusation­s “totally political” and among “the single most unfair, unjust things to happen to a candidate for anything.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., angrily accused Democrats of slinging “all the mud they could manufactur­e.”

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, responded, “If you really believe they are a smear job, why don’t you call for FBI investigat­ion?” Schumer accused the Republican­s of “a rush job to avoid the truth.”

Trump has made clear he won’t order an FBI investigat­ion of the allegation­s. And McConnell said that Thursday’s Judiciary Committee hearing would proceed and that full Senate considerat­ion

would follow “in the near future,” though he mentioned no date.

In a letter to the committee planning the hearing featuring Kavanaugh and his first accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, the nominee accused his opponents of launching “smears, pure and simple.”

In an unusual strategy for a Supreme Court nominee, Kavanaugh, 53, now a judge on the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, also sat for an interview along with his wife late Monday on the conservati­ve-friendly Fox News Channel.

Careful not to assail Ford but firm in his denial, he said, “I am not questionin­g and have not questioned that perhaps Dr. Ford at some point in her life was sexually assaulted by someone at some place, but what I know is I’ve never sexually assaulted anyone.”

“I’m not going to let false accusation­s drive us out of this process, and we’re looking for a fair process where I can be heard and defend my integrity, my lifelong record,” he said in an excerpt released by Fox before the telecast. “My lifelong record of promoting dignity and equality for women starting with the women who knew me when I was 14 years old. I’m not going anywhere.”

On Sunday, The New Yorker magazine reported that Deborah Ramirez described a 1980s, alcoholhea­vy Yale dormitory party at which she said Kavanaugh exposed himself, placed his penis in her face and caused her to touch it without her consent.

Despite the forceful rhetoric by Kavanaugh and his GOP supporters, it remained unclear how three moderate Republican­s — Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Arizona’s Jeff Flake and Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski — would react to the latest accusation. With the GOP’s Senate control hanging on a razor-thin 51-49 margin, defections by any two Republican senators would seal his fate if all Democrats vote “no.”

Proceeding with Kavanaugh seems to give Republican­s their best shot at filling the Supreme Court vacancy — and giving the court an increasing­ly conservati­ve tilt — before November’s elections, when GOP Senate control is in play.

Even if Republican­s lose their Senate majority, they could still have time to confirm a nominee in a postelecti­on lame duck session, but the GOP has not indicated that is under considerat­ion. Delaying Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on could give time for doubts about him to take root or for any fresh accusation­s to emerge.

A week ago, Ford told the Washington Post that at a high school house party in the early 1980s, a drunk Kavanaugh forced her into a bedroom where he pinned her on a bed, tried removing her clothes and muffled her mouth to prevent screams before she escaped.

Republican­s have attacked the credibilit­y of both women’s accounts. They note that neither the accusers nor news organizati­ons have found people willing to provide corroborat­ion, even though Ford and Ramirez have both named people who they said were present at the alleged incidents.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Brett Kavanaugh, with wife, Ashley, answers questions during a Fox News interview Monday.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Brett Kavanaugh, with wife, Ashley, answers questions during a Fox News interview Monday.

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