President skeptical of Kavanaugh allegation
Committee hearing scheduled for Monday
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday bluntly questioned the allegation that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted a fellow high school student over 30 years ago, and Republicans warned the accuser that the window was closing to tell her story before a confirmation vote.
Mr. Trump’s skepticism, the most explicit challenge top Republicans have so far mounted to Christine Blasey Ford’s credibility, came as GOP Senate leaders tried to firm up support for Judge Kavanaugh. A potentially climactic Judiciary Committee showdown is scheduled for Monday with both Ms. Ford and Judge Kavanaugh
invited, but her attendance is uncertain, casting doubt on whether the hearing will be held at all.
Ms. Ford has said she wants the FBI to investigate her allegation before she will testify. Democrats support that, but Mr. Trump and Senate Republicans have been emphatic that it won’t happen.
Leaving the White House to survey flood damage in North Carolina from Hurricane Florence, Mr. Trump conceded that “we’ll have to make a decision” if Ms. Ford’s account proves convincing. Despite that glimmer of hesitancy, which few other Republicans have shown publicly, the president stood firmly behind the 53-year-old Judge Kavanaugh, who would fill the second high court vacancy of Mr. Trump’s term.
“I can only say this: He is such an outstanding man. Very hard for me to imagine that anything happened,” Mr. Trump said.
The Republicans are resisting all Democratic efforts to slow and perhaps block what once seemed a smooth path to confirmation that would promote the conservative appeals court judge by the Oct. 1 opening of the Supreme Court’s new term. Judge Kavanaugh’s glide to approval was interrupted last weekend when word of Ms. Ford’s allegation became public, but GOP senators are showing no signs of slowing their drive to confirm him as quickly as possible.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote to Ms. Ford’s attorneys that the hearing was still scheduled for Monday morning, and he pointedly said she must submit her written statement by 10 a.m. Friday “if she intends to testify” that day.
Lisa Banks, a lawyer for Ms. Ford, released a statement late Wednesday that cast no light on whether her client will appear.
She wrote that Ms. Ford wants “a full non partisan investigation” and said Ms. Ford is willing to cooperate. But she said Mr. Grassley’s plan to call just Judge Kavanaugh and Ms. Ford “is not a fair or good faith investigation” and said “multiple witnesses” — whom she didn’t name — should appear.
“The rush to a hearing is unnecessary, and contrary to the Committee discovering the truth,” Ms. Banks wrote.
Ms. Ford has contended that at a house party in the 1980s, a drunken Judge Kavanaugh tried undressing her and stifling her cries on a bed before she fled. Judge Kavanaugh has repeatedly denied that claim.
Mr. Trump’s remark was noteworthy because most Republicans have handled the question of Ms. Ford’s credibility more gingerly. They say they want to give Ms. Ford, now a professor at Palo Alto University, every chance to tell her story.
“I’d really want to see her. I really would want to see what she has to say,” Mr. Trump said. “If she shows up, that would be wonderful. If she doesn’t show up, that would be unfortunate.”
Seven weeks from elections in which congressional control is at stake, Democrats have been unhesitant about casting Republicans as trying to strongarm a victim of abuse.
One key Democrat, Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill, announced Wednesday she will vote against Judge Kavanaugh, depriving Mr. Trump’s nominee of a possible swing vote.
Ms. McCaskill called the sexual assault allegations against Judge Kavanaugh troubling but said she based her decision on the judge’s views on issues like presidential power and “dark money” in campaigns. She’s the first of five undecided Senate Democrats in competitive re-election races to come out against Judge Kavanaugh.
The struggle between the two parties over the allegation illustrates how they are trying to navigate a political climate in which the #MeToo movement of outing sexual abusers has galvanized many female voters. A substantial delay could push confirmation past the November elections, when Democrats have a shot at winning Senate control, plus allow more time for unforeseen problems to pop up.
“Dr. Blasey Ford is calling for an impartial FBI investigation of her serious and credible allegations. Meanwhile Republicans are trying to bully her into a rigged hearing before a neutral investigation and without the only identified eyewitness,” Sen. Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democratic leader from Illinois, tweeted.
Ms. Ford and her Democratic allies also want the committee to interview Mark Judge, a Kavanaugh friend who Ms. Ford has said was in the bedroom during the attack. Mr. Judge has said he doesn’t remember the incident, never saw Judge Kavanaugh act that way, and has no desire to testify publicly.
There were signs the GOP’s strategy of planning a nationally televised hearing while also offering Ms. Ford the chance to testify in private was keeping possible Republican defections in check. The party controls the Senate 51-49 and the Judiciary panel by 11-10, so it cannot afford GOP “no” votes.
Moderate GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who’s had her share of clashes with Mr. Trump, said she hoped Ms. Ford would reconsider a decision not to testify and “it’s not fair to Judge Kavanaugh” if she refuses.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., said Democrats’ demands for an FBI investigation were a ploy to delay a confirmation vote.