Baltimore Sun

Senate panel to hear accuser

Kavanaugh also to testify in public about allegation against him

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Republican­s abruptly laid plans Monday for a Senate committee hearing at which Brett Kavanaugh and the woman alleging he sexually assaulted her decades ago will testify publicly, as GOP leaders opted for a showdown they hoped would prevent the accusation from sinking his Supreme Court nomination.

With GOP support eroding for plunging ahead without openly examining the allegation­s, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley said his panel would hold a hearing next Monday with both Kavanaugh and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford.

“To provide ample transparen­cy, we will hold a public hearing Monday to give these recent allegation­s a full airing,” Grassley, R-Iowa, said in a statement.

Hours earlier, top Republican­s had shown no interest in a spectacle that would thrust Kavanaugh and Ford before television cameras with each offering versions of what did or didn’t happen at a high school party in the early 1980s.

Instead, Grassley had said he’d seek telephone interviews with Kavanaugh and Ford, winning plaudits from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for planning to handle the episode “by the book.” Democrats rejected that plan, saying the seriousnes­s of the charges merited a full FBI investigat­ion.

Republican­s had also displayed no willingnes­s to delay a Judiciary panel vote that Grassley had planned for Thursday to

HEARING , Kavanaugh

advance the nomination, setting the stage for full Senate confirmati­on of Kavanaugh by month’s end, in time for the new Supreme Court session. Thursday’s vote will not occur.

President Donald Trump said earlier Monday that that schedule might slip. He told reporters at the White House: “If it takes a little delay, it will take a little delay.”

If the Judiciary committee’s timetable slips, it would become increasing­ly difficult for Republican­s to schedule a vote before the Nov. 6 elections.

With fragile GOP majorities of just 12-11 on the Judiciary committee and 51-49 in the full Senate, Republican leaders had little room for defectors without risking a humiliatin­g defeat of Trump’s nominee to replace retired Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Among the GOP defectors was Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, a Judiciary Committee member who has clashed bitterly with Trump and is retiring from the Senate. Flake said he told No. 2 Senate Republican leader John Cornyn of Texas on Sunday that “if we didn’t give her a chance to be heard, then I would vote no.”

There was enormous pressure on GOP Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, two moderates who have yet to announce their positions on Kavanaugh and aren’t on the Judiciary Committee.

Collins said Kavanaugh and Ford should testify under oath to the committee. Neither she nor Murkowski face re-election this fall.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., another retiring Trump critic who is not on the committee, also said he favored delaying Thursday’s panel meeting.

With the #MeToo movement galvanizin­g liberal and female voters and already costing prominent men their jobs in government, journalism and entertainm­ent, a hearing would offer a fuller vetting of Ford’s charges and present a politicall­y jarring prelude to November elections for control of Congress.

Some Democrats raised questions about whether Grassley’s plan was sufficient.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Judiciary panel, told reporters that “there needs to be some investigat­ion first, and I’m not that sure this allows for that.” Another Democrat on the panel, Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t, said staging the hearing without the FBI investigat­ion would make it a “sham.”

Underscori­ng the raw political divisions prompted by the Kavanaugh fight, Feinstein said she’d only learned of the hearing on Twitter.

Earlier, Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer of New York said it would be “a deep insult to the women of America” if Grassley did not postpone Thursday’s meeting. And in an unusually personal swipe, Schumer said McConnell was showing “unmitigate­d gall” to oppose delaying Kavanaugh’s nomination after refusing for most of 2016 to consider President Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the court after Antonin Scalia died.

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