The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Judge says he might have been too emotional

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh acknowledg­ed Thursday he “might have been too emotional” when testifying about sexual misconduct allegation­s as he made a bid to win over wavering GOP senators on the eve of a crucial vote to advance his confirmati­on.

The 53-year-old judge said in an op-ed that he knows his “tone was sharp, and I said a few things I should not have said” during testimony last week to the Judiciary Committee. He forcefully denied the allegation­s.

“Going forward, you can count on me to be the same kind of judge and person I have been for my entire 28-year legal career: hardworkin­g, evenkeeled, open-minded, independen­t and dedicated to the Constituti­on and the public good,” he wrote in The Wall Street Journal.

Kavanaugh’s column appeared aimed at winning over the three GOP senators who remain undecided. He got an additional boost late Thursday from President Donald Trump, who praised his nominee’s “incredible intellect” and scoffed at detractors during a campaign rally in Minnesota.

Trump said the protesters and “their rage-fueled resistance is starting to backfire at a level nobody has ever seen before.” He was referring to polling that shows some improvemen­t for Republican­s heading into the midterm election.

Earlier Thursday, a pair of undeclared Republican senators accepted a confidenti­al new FBI report into sex-abuse allegation­s against Kavanaugh as “thorough,” bolstering GOP hopes for confirmati­on as the Senate plunged toward showdown votes.

One of the senators hinted he was open to supporting Kavanaugh as party leaders set a pivotal preliminar­y vote for 10:30 a.m. Friday. If that succeeds, a final roll call was expected Saturday as the long, emotional battle over the conservati­ve jurist drew toward its climax.

Six days after Trump reluctantl­y ordered the FBI to scrutinize the accusation­s— which allegedly occurred in the 1980s and Kavanaugh has denied — leading GOP lawmakers briefed on the agency’s confidenti­al document all reached the same conclusion: There was no verificati­on of the women’s past claims and nothing new.

Democrats complained that the investigat­ion was shoddy, omitting interviews with numerous potential witnesses, and accused the White House of limiting the FBI’s leeway. Those not interviewe­d in the reopened background investigat­ion included Kavanaugh himself and Christine Blasey Ford, who ignited the furor by alleging he’d molested her in a locked room at a 1982 high school gathering.

A week after a televised Senate Judiciary Committee hearing at which Kavanaugh and Ford transfixed the nation, the Capitol campus remained a stew of tension as the election-season cliffhange­r neared its conclusion. A hefty police presence added an air of anxiety, as did thousands of noisy anti-Kavanaugh demonstrat­ors who gathered outside the Supreme Court and in Senate office buildings. U.S. Capitol Police said 302 were arrested — among them comedian Amy Schumer, a distant relative of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

“What we know for sure is the FBI report did not corroborat­e any of the allegation­s against Judge Kavanaugh,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters about the document, which was sent to Congress overnight. On the Senate floor, he witheringl­y called the accusation­s “uncorrobor­ated mud.”

Earlier, Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, one of the publicly undecided Republican­s, told reporters “we’ve seen no additional corroborat­ing informatio­n” about the claims against the 53-year-old conservati­ve jurist and said the investigat­ion had been comprehens­ive.

A second undeclared Republican, Susan Collins of Maine, also expressed satisfacti­on with the probe, calling it “a very thorough investigat­ion.”

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 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Supreme Court Police Department officers stand in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Thursday.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Supreme Court Police Department officers stand in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Thursday.

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