The Scotsman

Supreme Court judge nominee Kavanaugh clears further hurdle

- By LISA MASCARO

A deeply divided Senate pushed Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination past a key procedural hurdle yesterday, setting up a likely final showdown this weekend in a battle that has seen claims of historical sexual assault by the nominee threaten president Donald Trump’s effort to tip the court rightward for decades.

The Senate voted 51-49 to limit debate, effectivel­y defeating Democratic efforts to scuttle the nomination with endless delays. With Republican­s clinging to a two-vote majority, one Republican voted to stop the nomination, one Democrat to send it further.

Of the four politician­s who had not revealed their decisions until yesterday, Republican­s Susan Collins and Jeff Flake voted yes, as did Democrat Joe Manchin. Republican Lisa Murkowski voted not to send the nomination to the full Senate.

However, politician­s might vote differentl­y on the climactic confirmati­on roll call, and Ms Collins said she wouldn’t rule out doing so.

That left unclear whether yesterday’s tally signalled that the 53-year-old federal appellate judge was on his way to the nation’s highest court. Confirmati­on would be a crowning achievemen­t for Mr Trump, his conservati­ve base and Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell.

The vote occurred a day after the Senate received a roughly 50-page FBI report on the sexual assault allegation­s, which Mr Trump ordered only after wavering GOP senators forced him to do so.

Republican­s said the secret document failed to find anyone who could corroborat­e allegation­s by his two chief accusers, Christine Blasey Ford and Deborah Ramirez. Democrats belittled the bureau’s findings, saying agents constraine­d by the White House hadn’t reached out to numerous other people with potentiall­y important informatio­n.

The vote also occurred against a backdrop of smoldering resentment by partisans on both sides. That fury was reflected openly by thousands of boisterous antikavana­ugh demonstrat­ors who moved around the Capitol complex for days, confrontin­g senators in office buildings and even reportedly near their homes.

On the Senate floor, politician­s’ comments underscore­d the lingering bitterness.

“What left-wing groups and their Democratic allies have done to Judge Kavanaugh is nothing short of monstrous,” Senate judiciary committee chairman Chuck Grassley, said on the chamber’s floor before the vote. He accused Democrats of using destructiv­e, unwarrante­d personal attacks on the nominee and even encouragin­g the protesters, saying: “They have encouraged mob rule.”

newsdeskts@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? Protesters unfurl a sign as they occupy a Senate building during a rally against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC yesterday
Protesters unfurl a sign as they occupy a Senate building during a rally against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom