“I stand before you today on the heels of a tremendous victory for our nation...”
His appointment cements US Supreme Court’s shift to the right
U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP, on Kavanaugh’s appointment to the Supreme Court
CONSERVATIVE United States judge Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to the Supreme Court on Saturday by a razor-thin margin in the Senate, ending months of partisan rancour over his nomination and offering Donald Trump one of the biggest victories of his presidency.
Kavanaugh, 53, was sworn in after the Senate voted 50-48 in his favour — a move that cemented the high court’s shift to the right under Trump, who has chosen two of the nine sitting justices.
Protesters rallied here and other US cities against the ascent of Kavanaugh, who had faced multiple allegations of sexual misconduct and been criticised for his angry partisan rhetoric.
The prolonged nomination battle has roiled American politics, disrupting the status quo on Capitol Hill and firing up both Republicans and opposition Democrats a month before crucial midterm elections.
The two-vote margin of victory made it the closest Supreme Court confirmation vote since 1881, and by far the most contentious since Clarence Thomas in 1991.
“This is a historic night,” Trump said at a rally in Kansas after signing Kavanaugh’s commission aboard Air Force One.
“I stand before you today on the heels of a tremendous victory for our nation, our people and our beloved Constitution.”
Trump will host Kavanaugh at the White House for a public swearing-in ceremony today, following Saturday’s formal oathtaking at the high court.
Kavanaugh’s nomination as a replacement for retiring justice Anthony Kennedy was controversial from the start, but the initial focus was solely on the conservative views held by the married father of two.
But his ascent to the Supreme Court was thrown into doubt when university research psychologist Christine Blasey Ford testified that he had sexually assaulted her at a party when they were in high school.
Ahead of the Senate vote, protesters vented their rage on the steps of the US Capitol.
As they chanted “Shame!” and “November is coming!”, police took several dozen demonstrators down the steps and put them in plastic flex-cuffs.
Later, the protesters moved to the Supreme Court, at one point rushing the steps and banging on the building’s ornate bronze doors.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has railed against Kavanaugh’s critics, said he was “proud” of his colleagues and predicted a bright future for his party.
“Our base is fired up. We finally discovered the one thing that would fire up the Republican base, and we didn’t think of it. The other side did it,” he said after Kavanaugh’s confirmation.
Indeed, Kavanaugh’s confirmation reflects a high-water mark of the Trump presidency, before the halfway point: Republican control of the White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives, along with a firm conservative majority on the judiciary’s top court.
But the saga — fuelled by ugly accusations and counter-claims aired at nationally televised hearings, followed by an 11th-hour Federal Bureau of Investigation probe to address the assault allegations — has inflamed political passions.
The nomination laid bare the partisan gridlock on Capitol Hill and the political polarisation of America, ahead of the midterm Congressional elections set for Nov 6.