USA TODAY US Edition

Poll: ‘Kavanaugh effect’ will boost Dems

Findings belie notion that fight energized GOP

- Susan Page and Cat Hofacker

WASHINGTON – Brett Kavanaugh now sits on the Supreme Court, but the contentiou­s battle over his nomination continues to reverberat­e in the run-up to next month’s midterm elections.

A new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds that more than six in 10 likely voters say Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on after facing allegation­s of sexual assault makes them more likely to vote for one party or the other. Despite the convention­al wisdom that the fight energized the GOP base, these voters are more likely to say it has spurred them to support Democrats.

Christine Blasey Ford, a California professor, testified in September before the Senate Judiciary Committee that Kavanaugh tried to rape her at a house

party in suburban Maryland when both were in high school. In a combative response, Kavanaugh denied any wrongdoing.

The Senate then confirmed him

50-48, largely along party lines.

In the survey, 35 percent said Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on made them more likely to vote for a Democratic congressio­nal candidate and 27 percent said it made them more likely to vote for a Republican congressio­nal candidate. And 37 percent said it wouldn’t affect their vote.

There was a gender difference: By 3 percentage points, men said it made them more likely to vote Democratic. By

12 points, women said it made them more likely to vote Democratic.

“Women have a place in our society, and we’ve been demeaned enough,” said Gala Kline, 63, of Edon, a rural community in northwest Ohio. Kline, a political independen­t who finds herself opposing President Donald Trump, was among those called in the poll. She wondered how thoroughly Kavanaugh had been investigat­ed, including for previous government appointmen­ts. “People say: ‘He’s been questioned. They’ve done all these background checks for years.’ Did they ask the right question?”

But Wayne Bishop, 77, of Greenwood, S.C., said the attacks on Kavanaugh were part of a larger picture that was going to help Republican­s retain control of the House and Senate. “I think people are getting mad at the super-liberals – the Kavanaugh thing, the immigratio­n, all that kind of stuff,” he said.

The telephone survey of 1,000 likely voters Thursday through Monday has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on was seen by some as a test of whether things had changed since 1991, when the Senate confirmed Clarence Thomas to the high court despite accusation­s of sexual harassment by Anita Hill. Some of the senators who voted for Kavanaugh noted that Ford’s version of events wasn’t backed up by corroborat­ing witnesses. Some said they believed she had been attacked but not by Kavanaugh, though she said she was “100 percent” certain of her identifica­tion.

One-third of those surveyed, 33 percent, said Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on made them “angry;” one-fourth, 26 percent, said they were “delighted.” Just 6 percent said his confirmati­on “doesn’t matter one way or the other.”

Hard feelings remain: 45 percent say his addition to the Supreme Court is a “bad thing,” higher than the 35 percent who say it is a “good thing.”

Those surveyed, however, had a favorable impression of the Supreme Court, 55 percent to 25 percent – a more positive view than that of the president, Congress, the Republican and Democratic parties, and the news media.

 ?? JIM BOURG ?? Hard feelings linger from Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on.
JIM BOURG Hard feelings linger from Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on.

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