Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Kavanaugh confirmati­on spills into heated governor’s races

- By Geoff Mulvihill

The controvers­y over sexual assault allegation­s against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh spilled into governor’s races across the country as the woman at the center of the claims told her story to a riveted nation.

The already highly charged contests became even more so after psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford gave her emotional but steady recounting of a sexual assault she says happened while she and Kavanaugh were teenagers. Later, an emotional and emphatic Kavanaugh denied it.

Her testimony and whether Kavanaugh’s nomination should move forward became flashpoint­s in governor’s races from New Hampshire to Oregon.

One Republican facing re-election this November, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, called Ford’s allegation­s serious and said they should be fully investigat­ed.

Through a campaign spokesman, Sununu said the Senate “should think carefully about the next steps in this process.”

But his Democratic challenger Molly Kelly, said Sununu should go further and call for President Donald Trump to withdraw Kavanaugh’s nomination.

“Sununu’s latest statement is not enough,” Kelly said in a statement. “And he owes the women of New Hampshire an apology.”

It was similar in Oregon, where Republican challenger Knute Buehler called for an FBI investigat­ion into Ford’s charges while Democratic Gov. Kate Brown said Kavanaugh’s nomination should be rejected.

In a Twitter message, Brown called the federal judge “a threat to women’s rights in our nation.”

Governors have no official role in how the U.S. Senate should handle Brett Kavanaugh’s appointmen­t to the U.S. Supreme Court, but their voices could add pressure to senators trying to decide how to vote.

In Illinois, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner said earlier this month that there should be an investigat­ion and the allegation­s, if true, should disqualify Kavanaugh. He did not specify whether he thought the Senate inquiry was sufficient or whether the FBI should investigat­e, as Democrats have asked.

Rauner’s spokesman said the governor was traveling Thursday and did not watch Ford’s testimony.

His Democratic challenger, J.B. Pritzker, criticized Rauner’s response.

The governor, he said Thursday, “continues to support Trump and this troubling nominee. I’ve opposed Kavanaugh from day one because he poses a grave threat to Roe v. Wade, the Affordable Care Act, and critical consumer and environmen­tal protection­s.”

The allegation­s resonate deeply in Maryland, where Kavanaugh and Ford attended separate private prep schools. Ford says the assault took place at a gathering in a Maryland suburb of Washington, D.C.

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