The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Common ground in hoping Avenatti will soon disappear

- Kathleen Parker

At last, Democrats and Republican­s have found common ground in hoping that Michael Avenatti, the wannabe progressiv­e president, will soon disappear.

Best known as the lawyer for porn star Stormy Daniels and more recently for representi­ng Julie Swetnick, who leveled a dubious gangrape charge against now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Avenatti added to his infamy last week by suggesting that Democrats need to nominate a white man for president. Because?

“When you have a white male making the arguments, they carry more weight,” he said in a Time interview posted last week. “Should they carry more weight? Absolutely not. But do they? Yes.”

Well, he did promise that he was the Democratic version of Donald Trump. So there’s that.

It isn’t funny. Coincident­ally, Avenatti’s fateful remark came just as NBC was ousting “Today” host Megyn Kelly for insisting that wearing blackface for Halloween was a fun childhood tradition. Though she apologized, it was too little, too late. Welcome to 2018, Megyn.

On the very same day, more greasepain­t hit the fan when Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley referred Avenatti and Swetnick to the Department of Justice for investigat­ion into the possibilit­y that the two conspired to give false testimony against Kavanaugh and attempted obstructio­n of a congressio­nal investigat­ion.

Swetnick claimed that Kavanaugh was part of a drug-and-gang-rape operation at weekend high school parties that she attended as a college student.

Swetnick’s allegation­s were delivered in a sworn statement to Grassley’s committee on Sept. 26, the day before the muchwatche­d dual testimonie­s of Kavanaugh and first-accuser Christine Blasey Ford. Even though Swetnick’s story fell apart a few days later during an NBC News interview, in which she walked back or contradict­ed parts of her sworn statement, the damage had been done.

The next day, at Ford’s hearing, ranking committee member Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., mentioned the Swetnick allegation­s (but not specifical­ly the gangrape portion) in her opening statement.

Grassley clearly suspects a conspiracy involving Avenatti and Swetnick. Whatever occurred with them or others, the connection­s between one of Ford’s attorneys, Debra Katz, and Feinstein’s staff, which recommende­d Katz, suggest close channels of communicat­ion. In a small-world asterisk, Katz’s law firm represente­d Swetnick in a case a decade ago.

Meanwhile, Avenatti, expressed glee at Grassley’s DO J referral in a tweet Thursday: “Maybe if Grassley was actually a lawyer that knew something about the law, he would realize what he has done. He just opened up Pandora’s box as it relates to Justice Kavanaugh’s conduct. It is Christmas in October!” In a separate interview with Vanity Fair’s Tina Nguyen, he called Grassley a “moron.” Resorting to personal invective usually indicates an absence of argument.

Avenatti tried to explain himself to Nguyen, saying that his words were taken out of context. What he meant, he said, was that a white man defending a woman or minority person is most effective. Time stands by its story.

Given all of the above, it would seem that Halloween, not Christmas, is a more timely and apt holiday for Avenatti to celebrate. Perhaps he and Kelly, now $69 million richer, can crash the season’s party circuit as a spooky pair of racists — and then go far, far away.

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