The Oklahoman

A needed voice in the Senate

- Kathleen Parker kathleenpa­rker@ washpost.com

RWASHINGTO­N epublican Sen. Jeff Flake may have become a momentary hero for Democrats hoping to block Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, but Sen. Lindsey Graham has cinched the role as Jiminy Cricket of the U.S. Senate.

Never one to shy away from cameras or fall short on quotable one-liners, Graham came out swinging during Senate Judiciary Committee hearings Thursday and Friday. Fearing no consequenc­e, apparently, he railed against his Democratic colleagues with righteous outrage and said what was obviously true. Somebody had to do it.

Flake bucked his fellow Republican­s at the last minute Friday. After voting to advance Kavanaugh to the full Senate, Flake requested a oneweek delay to give the FBI time to conduct its own investigat­ion of allegation­s that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford when the two were at a party more than 30 years ago.

The usually congenial Graham showed up at Thursday’s hearing with Moral Outrage on his arm and Truth as his chaperone.

Love him or not— and who doesn’t love Jiminy Cricket?— Graham said in a very loud non-whisper what every sensible, fair-minded person was surely thinking: The hearings that ultimately brought Kavanaugh and Ford to tears were driven by a partisan quest for power without regard for the human collateral damage.

Railing at the Democratic side of the hearing room, Graham nearly shouted, “Boy, y’all want power. God I hope you never get it.”

The only thing worse than Republican­s with absolute power is Democrats with absolute power, right? It is true, however, that the pitiable spectacle of first Ford and then Kavanaugh showed that Senate Democrats were willing to martyr their own best witness against Kavanaugh to delay confirmati­on and, assuming they win the Senate in the midterm elections, block Donald Trump from appointing more conservati­ves to the high court.

Graham’s passionate commentary was, thus, a rallying cry to Republican voters, whose intensity has been flickering next to highly motivated Democrats, especially women. By Friday, he was calmer and more relaxed, perhaps because he believed Flake was on board. He spelled out the reasons Ford’s story wasn’t compelling enough to keep Kavanaugh off the bench.

Yes, her testimony was heartbreak­ing and seemed sincere. She plainly has suffered. Kavanaugh, too, has suffered immensely. Nearly losing control throughout his emotional statement, he was as credible as his accuser.

While many were horrified by Graham’s anger, I found it as cleansing and refreshing as a dip in the River Jordan. His points, meanwhile, were compelling.

Point 1: Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., sat on Ford’s July letter alleging the sexual assault until the eve of a scheduled committee vote on Kavanaugh. If she hadn’t, there would have been ample time to investigat­e the claim and conduct interviews, which committee Chairman Chuck Grassley did as soon as he knew of the letter in late September.

Point 2: If not for a leak that was likely from the Democratic side, Ford’s anonymity, which she deeply wanted, could have been preserved. But this wouldn’t have served the Democrats’ seeming strategy of delay or their apparent hope for an emotion-packed display.

Kavanaugh’s suffering was epic. By all accounts, he has lived his adult life as a model citizen, an exemplary husband and father, an admired judge. Yet our esteemed senators found it necessary to parse inscriptio­ns in his high school yearbook. Read yours lately?

With apologies for any nicknames that may ensue, Graham is a necessary voice, the human truth-ometer and translator who shouts the truth from the rooftops, then ambles amiably over to the cameras, smiles and jokes with the very people he savaged.

Long may Sen. Cricket’s flag wave.

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