Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Clear Up Kavanaugh Hearing Mystery Inquiry

- By JENNIFER RUBIN

“If [Kamala Harris] has dug up a nugget of something that could throw the nomination off track, she’ll be an instant Democratic heroine.”

Jennifer Rubin

The frenzied search for the identity of the author who penned the anonymous op-ed in The New York Times, in essence confirming it really is Crazyland over at the White House, consumes Washington. Anyone can play the guessing game, and for now no one can prove a guess is wrong. Hence, the perfect, gossipy discussion for political junkies. However, the more interestin­g mystery came up in the confirmati­on hearing for Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh.

As the hearing spilled into the evening, former California state attorney general Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., threw Kavanaugh off guard with a line of inquiry regarding conversati­on(s) about the Russia investigat­ion that he may have had with anyone at Kasowitz Benson Torres, the law firm founded by President Donald Trump’s lawyer Marc Kasowitz. When Kavanaugh meekly asked, “I would like to know the person you’re thinking of,” Harris responded frostily: “I think you’re thinking of someone and you don’t want to tell us.” Kavanaugh looked confused, if not nervous. He hadn’t seen this coming.

The exchange included Republican Sen. Mike Lee’s clumsy attempt to bail out Kavanaugh.

Now, if Harris has evidence Kavanaugh had an inappropri­ate or conflict-creating interchang­e with the president’s lawyer, it is critical we hear about it. If not, it is unfair to leave the inference hanging out there. If she is hampered in explaining this because of the cockamamie restrictio­ns on documents that Republican­s have erected, it is time for Democrats to cry foul, put whatever they have out there and let Republican­s justify their attempts to hide the ball.

This may be a break-out moment for the junior senator from California. Harris on Tuesday showed her flair for the dramatic in raising objections over Republican­s’ refusal to make hundreds of thousands of pages of documents available to the public. On Wednesday, she followed by showing her prosecutor­ial skill. Don’t ask a question you don’t know the answer to. Don’t bail out a witness who is struggling.

If she doesn’t really have anything of significan­ce, the incident will be forgotten — or cited as evidence that she is all show. However, if she’s dug up a nugget of something that could throw the nomination off track, she’ll be an instant Democratic heroine.

At the very least, she’s got senators and staffers on both sides of the aisle scratching their heads. In green rooms and on social media, staffers and lawmakers are buzzing. “What’s she got?” “I don’t know, but that was a weird exchange.”

Her splash comes at the time that the White House is in utter turmoil. White House paranoia runs rampant (and sometimes paranoids have reason to think someone is out to get them). The president’s mental and emotional state is called into question by his own advisers. Given all this, one wonders if the White House was caught flat-footed on something significan­t, and if it is now prepared to deal with a bobble in an all-critical nomination.

Given the utter chaos that has enveloped the White House, its effort to rush this nomination through and its effort to keep as much of Kavanaugh’s material as possible out of the public eye, we cannot eliminate the possibilit­y they wound up missing something. It’s for this very reason that it’s so critical to get all his materials out in public view and get definitive questions to senators’ questions.

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