Kavanaugh sworn in
The Senate confirmed Brett Kavanaugh as the 114th Supreme Court justice yesterday by one of the narrowest margins in history amid mass protests, ending a vitriolic battle over his nomination and solidifying a conservative majority on the court.
As a throng of angry demonstrators stood on the steps of the Capitol, the Senate finalised on a near party-line vote of 50 to 48 what will certainly be one of President Donald Trump’s most enduring legacies: two Supreme Court justices in two years in an increasingly polarised nation.
The brutal confirmation fight is likely to have far-reaching implications in next month’s midterm elections. Republicans are confronting an electrified Democratic base led by women infuriated by the treatment of Christine Blasey Ford, who detailed in emotional testimony last week her allegations that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when both were teenagers. Kavanaugh has denied the allegations.
Yet Republicans say the battle to get Kavanaugh confirmed – in the face of Democratic opposition and the ‘‘mob’’ of anti-Kavanaugh demonstrators who flooded the Capitol in recent days – only motivated a fractured GOP electorate on a singularly unifying issue for conservatives: the federal judiciary. ‘‘It’s been a great political gift for us. The tactics have energised our base,’’ Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said yesterday. ‘‘I want to thank the mob, because they’ve done the one thing we were having trouble doing, which was energising our base.’’
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., delivered a message ‘‘to so many millions who are outraged by what happened here ... vote.’’
Kavanaugh heads to the Supreme Court significantly scarred from the confirmation fight, which had the echoes of the 1991 battle over now-Justice Clarence Thomas who was accused of sexual harassment by law professor Anita Hill and defended himself in an emotional, highstakes congressional hearing.
Already, Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. has received more than a dozen complaints of judicial misconduct against Kavanaugh but is not referring them for investigation for the time being. And in a joint appearance on Saturday at Princeton University, their shared alma mater, Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor raised concerns about how the bitter partisan battle over Kavanaugh will affect the court’s reputation.
‘‘We have to rise above partisanship in our personal relationships,’’ said Sotomayor, who was nominated by President Barack Obama in 2009. ‘‘We have to treat each other with respect and dignity and with a sense of amicability that the rest of the world doesn’t often share.’’
The tension surrounding Kavanaugh’s nomination continued
until the final minutes in the packed Senate chamber, where several protesters were escorted out after disrupting the vote, during which Vice President Mike Pence presided.
‘‘It’s been a great political gift for us. The tactics have energised our base.’’
Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader