The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kavanaugh’s clerks: Diverse, and deployed to vouch for him

- Elizabeth Williamson

WASHINGTON — Part of the White House public relations campaign to win confirmati­on of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court began only seconds after President Donald Trump nominated him, when Kavanaugh gave a shout-out to his former law clerks and effectivel­y called on them as character witnesses.

“As a judge, I hire four law clerks each year,” Kavanaugh said Monday night in remarks at the White House. “I look for the best. My law clerks come from diverse background­s and points of view. I am proud that a majority of my law clerks have been women.”

Of the 48 clerks who worked for Kavanaugh over 12 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 25 were women, said Katie Wellington, who worked for him in 2014, when all four clerks were women, including Usha Chilukuri Vance, who now clerks for Chief Justice John Roberts.

The Class of 2014 “was the first year that any judge on the D.C. Circuit had hired four female law clerks,” said Wellington, now an associate at Hogan Lovells in Washington. “It was important to him. His mother was a judge,” she said, adding that 20 of Kavanaugh’s female law clerks have clerked on the Supreme Court.

By 9:07 p.m. Monday, while Trump was still introducin­g Kavanaugh to the country, a query from CRC landed in reporters’ inboxes: “Would you be interested in speaking with any of the former Judge Kavanaugh clerks? Below are statements for your stories.”

The quotes resembled book jacket blurbs, praising Kavanaugh’s “herculean work ethic,” “deep and nuanced understand­ing of the law” and “overriding commitment to do justice in every case.”

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AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES

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