South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)
Hundreds protest Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation
WASHINGTON — Chanting “We believe survivors!” “Vote them out!” and “Shame, shame, shame!” hundreds of demonstrators converged Saturday on the U.S. Capitol to protest the vote to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Protesters mixed with tourists and onlookers on the Capitol’s East Front plaza and carried signs expressing their displeasure with senators who voted to confirm Kavanaugh.
“We’ll remember in November,” one read. “No Justice, No Seat,” another read.
U.S. Capitol Police arrested a number of protesters who had gone up the Capitol’s center steps. Later, police cleared the plaza, and demonstrators moved across the street to the front of the Supreme Court.
Winnie Wong, senior adviser to the Women’s March, one of several liberal groups that have organized opposition to Kavanaugh, said the protest was the first of several “coordinated disruptions” planned throughout the day.
The group, she said, offered training in nonvio- lent protest tactics to as many as 1,300 activists. Many of them, she said, are fanning out across the Capitol complex and some were seated in the Senate gallery, trying to disrupt the vote.
“There are a number of friendly senators who have provided passes to us,” she said.
“It’s a clear message we are organized and we are not backing down,” Wong said. “A women’s wave is coming.”
Nicole Beck, an attorney for Break the Cycle, a group aiding victims of sexual assault, carried a sign that read, “Add a Tally If You Will Donate to Susan Collins’ Opponent.”
“As a woman, she has betrayed all of us,” Beck said of her focus on Collins, R-Maine, who defended Kavanaugh in a 44-minute speech Friday in the Senate.
Beck called the speech “disgusting” and dismissed the notion that Collins had been a swing vote. “I don’t think she was undecided. I think she was holding out to have the appearance of impartiality.”
On Friday, Capitol Police arrested 101 people who had demonstrated against Kavanaugh inside and outside of Senate office buildings. Charges included obstructing and unlawful conduct.