The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

»Democrats question judge’s temperamen­t,

Undecided senators say they want to see results of FBI probe.

- By John Wagner and Mike DeBonis

WASHINGTON — Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s temperamen­t and credibilit­y emerged as flashpoint­s Tuesday in the battle over his Supreme Court nomination, with Democrats increasing­ly pointing to his at times testy and emotional performanc­e at last week’s Senate hearing.

The strategy came as the FBI conducts a limited investigat­ion into allegation­s of sexual assault by Kavanaugh but with great uncertaint­y about whether the probe will unearth anything conclusive by the end of the week, when Republican­s are pressing for a vote.

During remarks on the Senate floor, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said last week’s hearing, at which Christine Blasey Ford alleged a drunken sexual assault in the early 1980s, left him and others with great concerns about Kavanaugh’s truthfulne­ss.

“He has grossly mischaract­erized his relationsh­ip with alcohol,” Schumer said, characteri­zing Kavanaugh as someone who “tiptoes around the truth.”

During the hearing, Kava- naugh acknowledg­ed some- times drinking too many beers in high school but said he did not have a problem with alcohol and never forgot his behavior — characteri­zations that have been questioned in news reports by some former classmates.

Regardless of what he did as a teenager, senators need to look at what Kavanaugh is saying now, Schumer argued.

“You cannot discount what he is saying and professing at age 53 when it flies in the face of being truthful,” Schumer said. “That is the key ques- tion here ... His credibilit­y is in real doubt — doubt enough for a lot of Americans to say this man should not be on the Supreme Court.”

Other Democrats _ and one key Republican, Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona — also raised questions Tuesday about whether Kavanaugh has the right temperamen­t to be on the high court.

Appearing at a forum sponsored by The Atlantic, Flake said he was concerned about some of Kavanaugh’s sharp interactio­ns with Democratic senators on the Judi- ciary Committee last week. While Flake said Kavanaugh deserves some leeway given what he and his family have been through, he said, “We can’t have this on the court.”

Flake, who pushed for a delay for the FBI to investigat­e the assault allegation­s, said he was keeping an open mind on the nomination.

Democrats offered harsher assessment­s. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., weighed in, saying at The Atlantic event that Kavanaugh was “hysterical” during the Senate hearing. She argued that yelling and crying by a woman would be viewed far differentl­y.

“If a woman ever behaved that way — to me it was behavior that was not suitable for a person who would be a judge on any court, much less the Supreme Court of the United States,” she said.

And Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., referenced the overthe-top lampooning of Kava- naugh’s hearing performanc­e by actor Matt Damon in a “Saturday Night Live” sketch last weekend.

“Unfortunat­ely, that was too accurate,” Leahy said dur i ng an interview on MSNBC. “I’ve never seen a judicial nominee like this. It does not reflect a judicial temperamen­t.”

Neverthele­ss, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., doubled down Tuesday on his vow to hold a vote by the end of the week on Kavanaugh, saying he was the victim of open “flood- gates of mud and muck.”

“One thing we know for sure: The Senate will vote on Judge Kavanaugh here on this floor, this week,” McConnell said during a floor speech in which he also dismissed some recent media reports about Kavanaugh’s decades-old behavior.

His comments come as Democrats are pressing for a more expansive FBI investi- gation into allegation­s of sexual misconduct by Kavanaugh. Democrats on the Sen- ate Judiciary Committee have called for FBI interviews of about two dozen people who might have informatio­n relevant to three Kavanaugh accusers.

And on Tuesday, Schumer called for a briefing by the FBI to the full Senate before a vote on whether to move Kavanaugh’s nomination forward.

McConnell said that Dem- ocrats continue to try to “move the goal posts” on Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on and predicted they would be unsatisfie­d when the FBI completes its work this week.

Democrats, McConnell said, “will not be satisfied unless they have brought down Judge Kavanaugh’s nomination.”

As he left the White House on Tuesday, President Donald Trump continued to voice support for Kavanaugh but told reporters it would “not be acceptable” if the FBI demonstrat­ed he had lied.

“I think that Judge Kava- naugh is doing pretty well, it seems to me, over the last 24 hours,” Trump said. “I think that Judge Kavanaugh is doing very well right now.”

“Hopefully, as Mitch said, they’ll have a vote by the end of the week, and it’ll be a positive vote.”

Kavanaugh’s fate is largely dependent on a small number of Republican­s who have said they want to see what a limited FBI investigat­ion yields.

Flake said he is pushing the White House for “a fulsome investigat­ion” of the allega- tions against Kavanaugh.

Appearing at a forum spon- sored by the Atlantic, Flake said he hopes FBI agents will be allowed to immediatel­y follow up on any leads they get while interviewi­ng witnesses.

“I just hope that we find fact,” Flake said.

A spokesman for McCo- nnell noted that the agree- ment with Flake and other swing senators was to have a procedural vote on Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on by Friday, so the majority leader would have to take steps to tee up that vote today.

“People will know what the FBI says before we end up voting on anything,” Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn, R-Texas, said.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, considered a swing vote on the nomination, refused to be drawn into the issue of Kavanaugh’s credibilit­y or the timing of an eventual vote on Tuesday.

“I’m not going to do a hypothetic­al, I really want to go with facts and that’s why I pressed for a supplement­al FBI investigat­ion,” she told reporters.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who also remains undecided said that it would be devastatin­g for Kavanaugh if the FBI discovered he has lied about anything.

“That finishes everything,” Manchin said. “If they can corroborat­e and there’s lying I think everyone’s said that.”

The White House has given the FBI permission to expand its probe beyond an initial group of witnesses but its full scope remains unclear.

A lawyer for Mark Judge, a friend and high school classmate of Kavanaugh, said Tuesday morning the FBI had completed its interview with Judge. Ford has alleged that Judge was in the room when Kavanaugh assaulted her. He has previously said he doesn’t recall the events recounted by Ford.

“Mr. Judge completed his FBI interview,” attorney Barbara Van Gelder said in a statement. “We are not commenting on the questions the FBI asked Mr. Judge.”

A second Kavanaugh accuser, Debbie Ramirez, met with the FBI for about two hours on Sunday, according to two people familiar with the investigat­ion.

Her legal team provided the FBI with a list of at least 20 people they believe may have relevant informatio­n and should be interviewe­d, the people said.

Ramirez has accused Kavanaugh of exposing himself to her while both were college students.

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS/ POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s temperamen­t and credibilit­y became flashpoint­s Tuesday in the battle over his Supreme Court nomination, with Democrats pointing to his at times testy and emotional performanc­e at last week’s Senate hearing.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS/ POOL/GETTY IMAGES Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s temperamen­t and credibilit­y became flashpoint­s Tuesday in the battle over his Supreme Court nomination, with Democrats pointing to his at times testy and emotional performanc­e at last week’s Senate hearing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States