Texarkana Gazette

Americans grapple with emotional, momentous hearing

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She was authentic. He was passionate. She wasn’t rememberin­g correctly. He wasn’t truthful.

Across the nation, Americans grappled with the extraordin­ary drama unfolding in the Senate on Thursday and, though passions ran high, it was hard to find people whose minds had truly been changed.

Echoes of Clarence Thomas and Anita Hill abounded, with many recalling that fraught 1991 hearing. And some addressed the momentous nature of the event. “This is history,” said Laura Williams, a law student from Mississipp­i.

AP journalist­s around the country talked to citizens to gauge their reactions. Here is some of what they heard:

JARRED BY EMOTION:

Jalon Alexander was expecting to hear soft-spoken, deferentia­l testimony when Kavanaugh took the stand. Instead, he said, he heard a fiery, raised voice— and he didn’t find it convincing.

“The more and more I listened to him, there was nothing he said that made me doubt Dr. Ford’s accusation,” he said.

Alexander, a 25-year-old law student at the University of Pittsburgh, identifies as a Democrat but said he began

watching Thursday’s proceeding­s as neither a supporter nor a detractor of the nominee.

That changed with Kavanaugh’s testimony. The student was rattled by the temperamen­t he felt Kavanaugh exhibited and the anger he showed at Democrats while vying for a nonpartisa­n job.

He even questioned the judge’s displays of emotion. “I didn’t see tears of genuine concern,” Alexander said. “Those tears to me scream, ‘I’m losing something I’m entitled to.’”

Alexander found Ford’s account of Kavanaugh and a friend laughing after the alleged attack the hearing’s most moving moment, and he wondered if that detail might sway Republican­s.

“At what cost are we willing to taint the court and to taint the image of what a Supreme Court justice is supposed to represent?” he asked.—Matt Sedensky

TEARS FOR KAVANAUGH FAMILY:

Republican strategist Jennifer Jacobs, watching the hearing from her home in San Diego, was struck both by Ford’s sincerity and Kavanaugh’s depth of emotion.

Both seemed believable, Jacobs said, but she felt convinced toward the end that Kavanaugh was not guilty. “I don’t want to discount that Dr. Ford had something happen to her, but I don’t think it was him,” she said.

As to Kavanaugh’s evident emotion—which some saw as unsettling—Jacobs said: “Clearly, this is a compassion­ate man. He’s not some crazed barbarian. You can’t help but have compassion for him.”

She was especially moved on behalf of Kavanaugh’s wife and children. “I literally was welled up with tears,” she said.

The whole spectacle left her upset for both Ford and Kavanaugh—and for the country. She called it “one of the worst days in American history.”—Jocelyn Gecker

AT YALE, EMPATHY FOR ACCUSER:

The Kavanaugh hearing had students glued to television­s and their phones at Yale University, the Ivy League institutio­n where the U.S. Supreme Court nominee attended college and law school.

As Ford testified, some students gasped aloud, said Alyssa Peterson, a third-year law student from Glen Ellyn, Illinois. “As a survivor of sexual assault myself, my heart aches for her,” Peterson said. “What she’s going through is just unimaginab­le.”

Samantha Peltz, a 26-yearold law student from Chicago, likened Thursday’s hearing to the proceeding­s years ago involving Thomas and Hill.

“Anita Hill went to this school,” Peltz said. “We felt she wasn’t given due considerat­ion to her allegation­s. We want to make sure that doesn’t happen again.”— Dave Collins

CONCERNED BY THE TONE:

Philadelph­ia attorney Shabrei Parker multitaske­d from her office during Ford’s testimony, jumping from her computer monitor to the television screen to her social media feeds.

Her initial impression­s confirmed her worries going into the hearing: It had the feeling of a trial. “It’s supposed to be a space for open-mindedness … to at least give the impression of being transparen­t,” said Parker, who pointed out that questions from GOP senators came through a prosecutor.

 ?? AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin ?? ■ Dozens of college students at Arizona State University in Phoenix watch the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he testifies Thursday in Washington. Kavanaugh testifies regarding the sexual assault allegation­s by Christine Blasey Ford.
AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin ■ Dozens of college students at Arizona State University in Phoenix watch the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he testifies Thursday in Washington. Kavanaugh testifies regarding the sexual assault allegation­s by Christine Blasey Ford.

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