Republicans have heard enough.
Just a day after hearing extraordinary, emotionally charged testimony from Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford, who accuses President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee of sexual assault, the Senate GOP is moving forward with the judge's confirmation process.
The first key vote on his nomination is lined up for Friday morning. If things go as Senate Republican leadership and Trump plan, Kavanaugh, who is also accused of sexual misconduct by two other women, could be confirmed by the middle of next week. The judge denies all of the allegations.
Kavanaugh's nomination was considered on the ropes as late as Thursday afternoon. Ford's harrowing, quiet testimony was widely seen as credible and potentially devastating for Republicans eager to get the 53-year-old Kavanaugh to a lifetime appointment on the top court and potentially establish a conservative majority on the bench that could last for generations.
Kavanaugh changed the calculus, however, when he delivered a fiery, emotional opening statement and subsequently dueled with Democratic senators. His performance earned rave reviews on the right, particularly from the president. "Judge Kavanaugh showed America exactly why I nominated him. His testimony was powerful, honest, and riveting," Trump wrote on Twitter.
Yet while his testimony painted a compelling, emotionally raw portrait of defiance, it still left doubt among his critics and Democrats who want to put a halt to the confirmation process.
While Ford, 51, was eager to call for an FBI probe into her claims, Kavanaugh repeatedly refused to agree to do so and brushed it off as an unnecessary step. The judge also refused to say whether his high school friend Mark Judge, whom Ford said was present during the alleged sexual assault in 1982, should come forward and testify. Judge has repeatedly said he does not recall the encounter Ford describes, and has sought to avoid speaking in public about her claims.
The Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley, has also refused to hold hearings on the other accusations facing Kavanaugh – including an allegation that he exposed himself to a college classmate and that he helped spiked girls' drinks at high school parties to make it easier for them to be gang raped.
Republicans hold a narrow 51-49 edge in the Senate. Two GOP defections could sink the nomination, provided the Democratic caucus is united in opposition. Yet there are at least two red state Democrats – Sens. Joe Donnelly of Indiana and Joe Manchin of West Virginia, both of whom are up for re-election this year – who are reportedly undecided about Kavanaugh.
The committee is scheduled to vote at 9:30 a.m. ET Friday. Republicans hold an 11-10 edge on the panel, so Kavanaugh's nomination, if approved, would move to the full Senate on a party-line vote. Even if the committee doesn't sign off on Kavanaugh – Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., is reportedly still undecided – Majority Leader Mitch McConnell could still move the nomination to the floor of the chamber for a full Senate vote.
Once his nomination gets to the floor, it will be subject to at least a few days of procedural votes. If Kavanaugh clears the Judiciary Committee on Friday, a motion to proceed would probably take place Saturday. That requires a simple majority to pass, leading to a cloture vote. This, too, would only require a simple majority, although historically it had required 60 votes. McConnell used the so-called nuclear option to do away with this rule to push through the nomination of Justice Neil Gorsuch, whom Trump nominated in 2017.
Then, provided the cloture motion is approved, Kavanaugh's nomination will be subject to as many as 30 hours of debate on the floor.
As things shake out right now, it looks like a full Senate vote on the judge's confirmation will happen Tuesday.
from Top News & Analysis https://ift.tt/2xKJGL7
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