Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The polls are turning

- JENNIFER RUBIN

Judge Brett Kavanaugh surely is in a class by himself, according to the most recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll: “More American voters now oppose Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination than support it after he was accused of committing sexual assault while he was in high school, with opposition increasing 9 points since last month . . . . In the poll—which was conducted Sunday (when the accusation from Christine Blasey Ford was first made public) through Wednesday—38 percent of voters say they oppose Kavanaugh’s nomination to serve on the nation’s highest court, including 27 percent who ‘strongly’ oppose him.” No Supreme Court nominee has gone over this poorly with the voters.

For senators looking over their shoulders at the midterm voters, it seems as if voting against Kavanaugh has its advantages. “The increased opposition to Kavanaugh has come, in particular, from women over 50 (who were +3 on Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on in August and are -7 now) suburban women (-6 in August and -11 now), independen­ts (who were +15 in August and -16 now) and seniors (+9 in August to -10 now).”

Republican­s still back Kavanaugh overwhelmi­ngly (73 percent), but everyone else is quite negative (independen­ts oppose him 37 to 21 percent; Democrats oppose him 66 to 8 percent). That gives red-state Democrats some breathing room to oppose Kavanaugh.

Republican senators find themselves in a tough spot. If they ridicule or dismiss Ford, many voters outside the hardcore GOP base will be outraged. If she comes across as sincere and the senators vote for Kavanaugh anyway, the backlash from independen­ts, women and Democrats may be fierce. However, if the senators abandon Kavanaugh, the already depressed GOP base may not show up in November. The best they can do is keep their heads down, ask Ford no questions if she appears, and pray Kavanaugh withdraws on his own.

Interestin­gly, the governor and lieutenant governor of Alaska, Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s home state, came out against the nomination. They cited protection of the Affordable Care Act, the concern Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) raised about native peoples and, in stinging terms, Ford’s allegation­s.

“We believe a thorough review of past allegation­s against Mr. Kavanaugh is needed before a confirmati­on vote takes place. Violence against women in Alaska is an epidemic,” they wrote. “We do not condone placing someone into one of our nation’s highest positions of power while so many key questions remain unanswered.” Even in a conservati­ve state such as Alaska, that’s a remarkable signal that voting to confirm Kavanaugh can be perilous.

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