The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

A 4-week sprint: Dems, GOP race to define elections

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON >> Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on to the Supreme Court fired the starting pistol for the final sprint to Election Day, with control of the House and Senate at stake.

The nation’s reckoning with power and who to believe about sexual misconduct has generated a new anger factor among the electorate and made the Nov. 6 balloting a referendum on more than President Donald Trump.

What to watch over the final four weeks:

KAVANAUGH, TO THE COURT

Kavanaugh was sworn in as the nation’s 114th member of the Supreme Court after a savage battle that splintered the Senate and riveted the country. Kavanaugh took his oath of office to his lifetime seat on Saturday just hours after

the climactic 50-48 roll call. It was the narrowest Senate vote to confirm a justice since 1881.

That was a fitting result for a 100-member chamber that represents a nation deeply split over an array of issues, from health care to who should be considered an American. A yawning divide has opened in the last year over whether allegation­s of sexual misconduct should be enough to topple accused men from the pinnacle of their profession­s.

Enter Kavanaugh, the appellate court judge accused by Christine Blasey Ford in emotional sworn testimony of sexually assaulting her in the 1980s, while the two were in high school. Accusation­s from other women followed, none corroborat­ed.

Kavanaugh denies that he ever sexually assaulted anyone. In a frequently shouted sworn statement of his own, he decried the Senate for putting his nomination in jeopardy.

THE KAVANAUGH EFFECT

The Kavanaugh confirmati­on has blown open the midterm elections from being a national referendum on Trump’s stewardshi­p to a raw emotional discussion over the lack of women in power and how to handle sexual misconduct allegation­s.

With Kavanaugh’s ascension to the high court, Republican­s, long dispirited by Trump’s string of scandals and the prospect of losing their congressio­nal majorities, are whooping it up.

“It’s turned our base on fire,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said. He added Monday that the fight over Kavanaugh, particular­ly that his nomination was stymied by unproven allegation­s, injected the GOP with an “adrenaline shot that we had not been able to figure out how to achieve in any other way.”

Though Kavanaugh had been sworn in on Saturday, Trump hosted a glittering East Room ceremonial swearing-in for him Monday night.

What’s unclear is whether GOP unity is enough to preserve the GOP power in Congress.

The same question faces the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct after the White House successful­ly argued that the Kavanaugh allegation­s should not be conflated with the rest of the movement.

Even before the confirmati­on, Kavanaugh’s opponents had a comeback line, printed on the back of jackets they wore to the Capitol: “November is coming.”

NORTH DAKOTA

Almost immediatel­y after the Senate vote, Democrats felt the chill from faraway North Dakota. That’s the state Trump won by 36 percentage points against Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016. And even before the Kavanaugh controvers­y, the Senate race there was among a handful of close contests that could decide whether Republican­s keep control of the Senate, where they have a 51-49 majority.

Then on Saturday, Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp defied her state’s support for Trump and voted against Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on. Heitkamp said she was concerned about Kavanaugh’s temperamen­t after his emotional performanc­e before the Senate Judiciary Committee. “Without hesitation,” Heitkamp told reporters, she believed Ford.

Polls have put her Republican opponent, Rep. Kevin Cramer, comfortabl­y ahead.

He told The New York Times that #MeToo was a “movement toward victimizat­ion” that had caused a backlash. “The world got to see close up how ugly it can be when you go too far,” he’s quoted as saying.

FRAMING THE STORY

Now it’s a four-week race to tell the story.

Trump has a busy campaign schedule to spread the word that the allegation­s against Kavanaugh were a “hoax that was set up by the Democrats” at what he’s called a dangerous time for men who can be falsely accused. “I think you’re going to see a lot of things happen on Nov. 6 that would not have happened before,” Trump said Monday as he departed for an event in Florida.

At Monday’s East Room ceremony, Trump again invoked the rhetoric Republican­s are using to frame the whole episode: Kavanaugh, Trump said, had been “proven innocent,” even though critics say the investigat­ion was not thorough enough to merit that conclusion. The campaign against Kavanaugh had been based on “lies,” including by “evil” people. Trump is expected to spread that message over multiple campaign rallies, including this week in Iowa, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio and Kentucky. McConnell has cast Kavanaugh’s opponents, many of whom protested in the halls of the Senate and yelled at lawmakers, as “the mob.” Democrats are pointing to the Republican­s’ handling of the Kavanaugh confirmati­on as one more reason to oppose the president who nominated him and mocked Ford.

“Folks who feel very strongly one way or the other about the issues in front of us should get out and vote,” said Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

2020 CANDIDATES

Yep, they’re already running, ostensibly in support of other midterm election candidates.

Sen. Cory Booker, DN.J., made a beeline from the Senate confirmati­on vote on Saturday for Iowa and the Democrats’ big fall fundraiser there.

“We’re not defined by a president who mocks a hero, Dr. (Christine) Blasey Ford. We’re not defined by a president who doesn’t believe women,” Booker told about 1,000 activists.

The next day, Sen. Kamala Harris turned up in politicall­y important Ohio, where she reminded more than 1,000 of the party faithful at the Ohio Democratic Party’s fall fundraisin­g dinner that she walked out of the Kavanaugh proceeding­s at one point because they had become “a sham and a disgrace.”

She said she doesn’t believe the Kavanaugh story is over. “On these issues that were presented during those hearings, I believe the truth will eventually reveal itself.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders is embarking on a nine-state battlegrou­nd tour on behalf of Democratic candidates to test the durability of the left-leaning coalition he assembled in 2016.

And Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is spending heavily on Facebook ads in an effort to build a national base of support, according to the Boston Globe and the Center for Responsive Politics.

 ?? ANDY ABEYTA/QUAD CITY TIMES VIA AP ?? Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., speaks to a crowd at a Get Out the Vote Rally at the RiverCente­r in Davenport, Iowa, Monday, Oct. 8, 2018.
ANDY ABEYTA/QUAD CITY TIMES VIA AP Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., speaks to a crowd at a Get Out the Vote Rally at the RiverCente­r in Davenport, Iowa, Monday, Oct. 8, 2018.

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